Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to a Pier Replacement Project, 53026-53046 [2014-21140]
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reasonably likely to, adversely affect the
species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival.’’
With respect to military readiness
activities, the MMPA defines
‘‘harassment’’ as: ‘‘(i) any act that
injures or has the significant potential to
injure a marine mammal stock in the
wild [Level A Harassment]; or (ii) any
act that disturbs or is likely to disturb
a marine mammal or marine mammal
stock in the wild by causing disruption
of natural behavioral patterns,
including, but not limited to, migration,
surfacing, nursing, breeding, feeding, or
sheltering, to a point where such
behavioral patterns are abandoned or
significantly altered [Level B
Harassment].’’
Description of the Specified Activity
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[FR Doc. 2014–21141 Filed 9–4–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
On July 28, 2014, NMFS received an
application from the Navy requesting a
Letter of Authorization (LOA) for the
take of 19 species of marine mammals
incidental to Navy training activities to
be conducted in the Gulf of Alaska
Temporary Maritime Activities Area
(GOA TMAA) over 5 years. The Navy
requests a 5-year LOA for training
activities to be conducted from 2016
through 2021. The GOA TMAA is a
polygon roughly the shape of a 300 nm
by 150 nm rectangle oriented northwest
to southeast in the long direction (see
Figure 1–1 of the Navy’s application for
a map of the GOA TMAA). The
activities conducted within the GOA
TMAA are classified as military
readiness activities. The Navy states that
these activities may expose some of the
marine mammals present within the
GOA TMAA to sound from underwater
acoustic sources and explosives. The
Navy requests authorization to take 19
marine mammal species by Level B
(behavioral) harassment; one of those
marine mammal species (Dall’s
porpoise) may be taken by Level A
(injury) harassment.
In the application submitted to
NMFS, the Navy requests authorization
to take marine mammals incidental to
conducting anti-surface warfare and
anti-submarine warfare training
activities. Detailed descriptions of these
activities, including duration, location,
and equipment involved, are provided
in the Navy’s application. The Navy has
also prepared a Draft Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement
(DSEIS) analyzing the effects on the
human environment of implementing
their preferred alternative (among
others).
14:29 Sep 04, 2014
Dated: August 29, 2014.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
received after the end of the comment
period. Comments received
electronically, including all
attachments, must not exceed a 25megabyte file size. Attachments to
electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word or Excel or Adobe PDF
file formats only. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted to the
Internet at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/
permits/incidental.htm without change.
All personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address) voluntarily
submitted by the commenter may be
publicly accessible. Do not submit
confidential business information or
otherwise sensitive or protected
information.
Ben
Laws, Office of Protected Resources,
NMFS, (301) 427–8401.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Summary of Request
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Information Solicited
Interested persons may submit
information, suggestions, and comments
concerning the Navy’s request (see
ADDRESSES). All input related to the
Navy’s GOA TMAA request and NMFS’
role in governing the incidental taking
of marine mammals will be considered
by NMFS when developing, if
appropriate, the most effective
regulations governing the issuance of a
Letter of Authorization.
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XD445
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to
Specified Activities; Taking Marine
Mammals Incidental to a Pier
Replacement Project
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental
harassment authorization; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS has received a request
from the U.S. Navy (Navy) for
authorization to take marine mammals
incidental to construction activities as
part of a pier replacement project.
Pursuant to the Marine Mammal
Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is
requesting comments on its proposal to
issue an incidental harassment
authorization (IHA) to the Navy to
incidentally take marine mammals, by
Level B Harassment only, during the
specified activity.
DATES: Comments and information must
be received no later than October 6,
2014.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the
application should be addressed to Jolie
Harrison, Chief, Permits and
Conservation Division, Office of
Protected Resources, National Marine
Fisheries Service. Physical comments
should be sent to 1315 East-West
Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 and
electronic comments should be sent to
ITP.Laws@noaa.gov.
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible
for comments sent by any other method,
to any other address or individual, or
SUMMARY:
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Availability
An electronic copy of the Navy’s
application and supporting documents,
as well as a list of the references cited
in this document, may be obtained by
visiting the Internet at:
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/
incidental.htm. In case of problems
accessing these documents, please call
the contact listed above.
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
The Navy prepared an Environmental
Assessment (EA; 2013) for its pier
replacement project. We subsequently
adopted the EA and signed our own
Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) prior to issuing the first IHA for
this project, in accordance with NEPA
and the regulations published by the
Council on Environmental Quality.
Information in the Navy’s application,
the Navy’s EA, and this notice
collectively provide the environmental
information related to proposed
issuance of this IHA for public review
and comment. All documents are
available at the aforementioned Web
site. We will review all comments
submitted in response to this notice as
we complete the NEPA process,
including a decision of whether to
reaffirm the existing FONSI, prior to a
final decision on the incidental take
authorization request.
Background
Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the
MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.) direct
the Secretary of Commerce to allow,
upon request, the incidental, but not
intentional, taking of small numbers of
marine mammals by U.S. citizens who
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engage in a specified activity (other than
commercial fishing) within a specified
geographical region if certain findings
are made and either regulations are
issued or, if the taking is limited to
harassment, a notice of a proposed
authorization is provided to the public
for review.
Authorization for incidental takings
shall be granted if NMFS finds that the
taking will have a negligible impact on
the species or stock(s), will not have an
unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for
subsistence uses (where relevant), and if
the permissible methods of taking and
requirements pertaining to the
mitigation, monitoring and reporting of
such takings are set forth. NMFS has
defined ‘‘negligible impact’’ in 50 CFR
216.103 as ‘‘. . . an impact resulting
from the specified activity that cannot
be reasonably expected to, and is not
reasonably likely to, adversely affect the
species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival.’’
Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA
established an expedited process by
which citizens of the U.S. can apply for
an authorization to incidentally take
small numbers of marine mammals by
harassment. Section 101(a)(5)(D)
establishes a 45-day time limit for
NMFS review of an application
followed by a 30-day public notice and
comment period on any proposed
authorizations for the incidental
harassment of marine mammals. Within
45 days of the close of the comment
period, NMFS must either issue or deny
the authorization. Except with respect to
certain activities not pertinent here, the
MMPA defines ‘‘harassment’’ as ‘‘any
act of pursuit, torment, or annoyance
which (i) has the potential to injure a
marine mammal or marine mammal
stock in the wild [Level A harassment];
or (ii) has the potential to disturb a
marine mammal or marine mammal
stock in the wild by causing disruption
of behavioral patterns, including, but
not limited to, migration, breathing,
nursing, breeding, feeding, or sheltering
[Level B harassment].’’
revised versions of the request on
August 14 and August 19, 2014, the
latter of which we deemed adequate and
complete. The pier replacement project
is planned to occur over four years; this
proposed IHA would cover only the
second year of work and would be valid
for a period of one year from the date
of issuance. Hereafter, use of the generic
term ‘‘pile driving’’ may refer to both
pile installation and removal unless
otherwise noted.
The use of both vibratory and impact
pile driving is expected to produce
underwater sound at levels that have the
potential to result in behavioral
harassment of marine mammals. Species
with the expected potential to be
present during all or a portion of the inwater work window include the
California sea lion (Zalophus
californianus), harbor seal (Phoca
vitulina richardii), bottlenose dolphin
(Tursiops truncatus truncatus), gray
whale (Eschrichtius robustus), and
either short-beaked or long-beaked
common dolphins (Delphinus spp.).
California sea lions are present yearround and are common in the project
area, while bottlenose dolphins may be
present year-round but sightings are
highly variable in Navy marine mammal
surveys of northern San Diego Bay.
Harbor seals are also common but have
limited occurrence in the project area in
comparison with sea lions. Gray whales
may be observed in San Diego Bay
sporadically during migration periods.
Common dolphins are known to occur
in nearshore waters outside San Diego
Bay, but are only rarely observed near
or in the bay.
This would be the second such IHA,
if issued, following the IHA issued
effective from September 1, 2013,
through August 31, 2014 (78 FR 44539).
A monitoring report is available on the
Internet at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/
permits/incidental.htm and provides
environmental information related to
proposed issuance of this IHA for public
review and comment.
Summary of Request
On July 8, 2014, we received a request
from the Navy for authorization to take
marine mammals incidental to pile
installation and removal associated with
a pier replacement project in San Diego
Bay at Naval Base Point Loma in San
Diego, CA (NBPL), followed on July 14,
2014, by a draft monitoring report for
activities conducted under the previous
IHA issued for this project. We reviewed
these documents and provided a request
for additional information to the Navy
on August 5, 2014; the Navy submitted
Overview
NBPL provides berthing and support
services for Navy submarines and other
fleet assets. The existing fuel pier serves
as a fuel depot for loading and
unloading tankers and Navy underway
replenishment vessels that refuel ships
at sea (‘‘oilers’’), as well as transferring
fuel to local replenishment vessels and
other small craft operating in San Diego
Bay, and is the only active Navy fueling
facility in southern California. Portions
of the pier are over one hundred years
old, while the newer segment was
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Description of the Specified Activity
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constructed in 1942. The pier as a whole
is significantly past its design service
life and does not meet current
construction standards.
Over the course of four years, the
Navy plans to demolish and remove the
existing pier and associated pipelines
and appurtenances while
simultaneously replacing it with a
generally similar structure that meets
relevant standards for seismic strength
and is designed to better accommodate
modern Navy ships. Demolition and
construction are planned to occur in
two phases to maintain the fueling
capabilities of the existing pier while
the new pier is being constructed.
During the second year of construction
(the specified activity considered under
this proposed IHA), approximately 272
piles (18- to 36-in steel pipe piles)
would be installed and 402 piles would
be removed (via multiple methods) over
the course of a maximum 135 in-water
construction days. All steel piles will be
driven with a vibratory hammer for their
initial embedment depths and finished
with an impact hammer, as necessary.
The proposed actions with the
potential to incidentally harass marine
mammals within the waters adjacent to
NBPL are vibratory and impact pile
installation and removal of piles via
vibratory hammer or pneumatic
chipper. Concurrent use of multiple pile
driving rigs is not planned; however,
pile removal conducted as part of
demolition activities (which could
occur via a number of techniques other
than use of a vibratory hammer) is
expected to occur concurrently with
pile installation conducted as part of
construction activities.
Dates and Duration
The entire project is scheduled to
occur from 2013–17; the proposed
activities that would be authorized by
this IHA, during the second year of
work, would occur for one year from the
date of issuance of this proposed IHA.
Under the terms of a memorandum of
understanding (MOU) between the Navy
and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
(FWS), all noise- and turbidityproducing in-water activities in
designated least tern foraging habitat are
to be avoided during the period when
least terns are present and engaged in
nesting and foraging (a window from
approximately September 15 through
April 1). However, the Navy is currently
negotiating with FWS to extend that
window and it is possible that in-water
work, as described below, could occur
at any time during the period of validity
of this proposed IHA. The conduct of
any such work would be subject to
approval from FWS under the terms of
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the MOU. We expect that in-water work
would primarily occur during the
October 1–April 1 period. In-water pile
driving work would be limited to 135
days in total under this proposed IHA.
Pile driving would occur during normal
working hours (approximately 7 a.m. to
4 p.m.).
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Specific Geographic Region
NBPL is located on the peninsula of
Point Loma near the mouth and along
the northern edge of San Diego Bay (see
Figures 1–1 and 1–2 in the Navy’s
application). San Diego Bay is a narrow,
crescent-shaped natural embayment
oriented northwest-southeast with an
approximate length of 24 km and a total
area of roughly 4,500 ha. The width of
the bay ranges from 0.3 to 5.8 km, and
depths range from 23 m mean lower low
water (MLLW) near the tip of Ballast
Point to less than 2 m at the southern
end (see Figure 2–1 of the Navy’s
application). San Diego Bay is a heavily
urbanized area with a mix of industrial,
military, and recreational uses. The
northern and central portions of the bay
have been shaped by historic dredging
to support large ship navigation.
Dredging occurs as necessary to
maintain constant depth within the
navigation channel. Outside the
navigation channel, the bay floor
consists of platforms at depths that vary
slightly. Sediments in northern San
Diego Bay are relatively sandy as tidal
currents tend to keep the finer silt and
clay fractions in suspension, except in
harbors and elsewhere in the lee of
structures where water movement is
diminished. Much of the shoreline
consists of riprap and manmade
structures. San Diego Bay is heavily
used by commercial, recreational, and
military vessels, with an average of over
80,000 vessel movements (in or out of
the bay) per year (not including
recreational boating within the Bay) (see
Table 2–2 of the Navy’s application).
For more information about the specific
geographic region, please see section 2.3
of the Navy’s application.
Detailed Description of Activities
In order to provide context, we
described the entire project in our
Federal Register notice of proposed
authorization associated with the firstyear IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013).
Please see that document for an
overview of the entire fuel pier
replacement project, or see the Navy’s
Environmental Assessment (2013) for
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more detail. Here, we provide an
overview of relevant construction
methods before describing only the
specific project portions scheduled for
completion during the second work
window. Approximately 498 piles in
total are planned to be installed for the
project, including steel, concrete, and
plastic piles. For the second year of
work, approximately 272 piles would be
installed (all steel pipe piles, 18- to 36in). Tables 1 and 2 detail the piles to be
installed and removed, respectively,
under this proposed IHA.
Methods, Pile Installation—Vibratory
hammers, which can be used to either
install or extract a pile, contain a system
of counter-rotating eccentric weights
powered by hydraulic motors and are
designed in such a way that horizontal
vibrations cancel out, while vertical
vibrations are transmitted into the pile.
The pile driving machine is lifted and
positioned over the pile by means of an
excavator or crane, and is fastened to
the pile by a clamp and/or bolts. The
vibrations produced cause liquefaction
of the substrate surrounding the pile,
enabling the pile to be extracted or
driven into the ground using the weight
of the pile plus the hammer. Impact
hammers use a rising and falling piston
to repeatedly strike a pile and drive it
into the ground.
We generally require that vibratory
driving be used to the maximum extent
feasible, considering project design
requirements and site conditions. Steel
piles are typically vibratory-driven for
their initial embedment depths or to
refusal and finished with an impact
hammer for proofing or until the pile
meets structural requirements
(potentially an approximate 25–125
blows), as necessary. Proofing involves
striking a driven pile with an impact
hammer to verify that it provides the
required load-bearing capacity, as
indicated by the number of hammer
blows per foot of pile advancement.
Non-steel piles—not planned for
installation during this proposed
activity—are typically impact-driven for
their entire embedment depth, in part
because non-steel piles are often
displacement piles (as opposed to pipe
piles) and require some impact to allow
substrate penetration.
The Navy assumes that the contractor
will drive approximately two steel piles
per day, with each pile assumed to
require up to two hours of driving,
including 1–1.5 hours of vibratory pile
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driving and up to 0.5 hour of impact
pile driving (if necessary).
Methods, Pile Removal—There are
multiple methods for pile removal,
including dry pulling, cutting at the
mudline, jetting, and vibratory removal.
Typically piles will be cut off at the
mudline; however, the full length of the
piles would be pulled at the area where
the new approach segment would be
constructed. An attempt will first be
made to dry pull the piles with a bargemounted crane. A vibratory hammer or
a pneumatic chipper may be used to
loosen the piles. Jetting (the application
of a focused stream of water under high
pressure) would be another option to
loosen piles that could not be removed
through the previous procedures.
Existing caisson elements would be
removed with a clamshell, which is a
dredging bucket consisting of two
similar halves that open/close at the
bottom and are hinged at the top. The
clamshell would be used to grasp and
lift large components. When a wooden
pile cannot be completely pulled out,
the pile may be cut at the mudline using
the clamshell’s hydraulic jaws and/or a
diver-operated underwater chainsaw,
except for piles that are within the
footprint of the approach pier, which
may require jetting to remove. The
majority of pile removal will likely not
require the use of vibratory extraction
and/or pneumatic chipping, and these
methods are included here as
contingency in the event other methods
of extraction are not successful.
Indicator Pile Program (Fall 2014)—
The Indicator Pile Program (IPP) was
designed to validate the length of pile
required and the method of installation
(vibratory and impact). The original
plan called for approximately twelve
steel pipe piles (36- and 48-in diameter)
to be driven in the new pier alignment
to verify the driving conditions and
establish the final driving lengths prior
to fabrication of the final production
piles that would be used to construct
the new pier. However, the Navy
determined that 36-in piles would likely
be sufficient for structural requirements
of the new fuel pier and conducted the
IPP under the previous IHA with 30and 36-in piles (see ‘‘Results of Previous
Monitoring’’ below). The Navy drove
nine piles (two 30-in and seven 36-in
piles) and plans to conclude the IPP
under this proposed IHA by driving an
additional two 36-in steel pipe piles.
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TABLE 1—DETAILS OF PILES TO BE INSTALLED
Purpose
Indicator Pile Program .............
Temporary dolphin ...................
Temporary shoring piles ..........
Location
Planned timing
Number per pile diameter
(in)
Planned
number of
days
18
24
30
36
Fall 2014 .................................
Fall 2014 .................................
Fall 2014 .................................
1
5
5
0
0
4
0
0
0
0
10
0
2
0
0
Temporary trestle piles ............
Abutment piles .........................
Approach pier ...........................
Fuel pier ...................................
Permanent dolphins .................
Outboard side of existing pier
South of existing pier ..............
Existing pier approach and
intersection.
North of new approach trestle
New pier, along shoreline .......
New pier footprint ....................
New pier footprint ....................
North of existing pier ...............
Fall 2014 .................................
Winter 2014–15 .......................
Fall 2014–Spring 2015 ............
Fall 2014 .................................
Spring 2015 .............................
14
10
90
........................
10
0
0
0
0
0
16
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
23
0
18
104
95
0
Totals—272 piles ..............
..................................................
Fall 2014–Spring 2015 ............
1135
4
16
33
219
1 Numbers
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of piles, timing, and number of days associated with any particular component of work are subject to change. However, the total of
135 days in-water pile driving is an absolute maximum.
Temporary Structures—The Navy
plans to install a number of temporary
piles in order to maintain fuel pier
function during the demolition/
construction work. A temporary
mooring dolphin (a structure that
extends above the water level and is not
connected to shore or other structures,
and are often used to extend mooring
capacity of a pier) will be constructed to
allow vessels to berth and load/unload
fuel on the existing south segment while
the north segment of the existing pier is
under demolition.
Permanent Structures—Initial work
for construction of the new pier is
planned to begin during the period of
this proposed IHA, including
construction of abutments at the
shoreside end of the approach segment
for the new fuel pier and construction
of the pier itself. The latter will include
work on the ramped approach pier
(lower and upper deck), two mooring
dolphins, and the double-deck fueling
pier.
Demolition—Following construction
of temporary structures and as
construction of the new pier proceeds,
demolition of the north segment of the
existing pier will be conducted. Much of
the demolition work will be abovewater, involving removal of decking,
utilities, and appurtenances, but inwater structure removal will also occur,
as described above under ‘‘Methods,
Pile Removal.’’ Demolition work
planned during the period of this
proposed IHA is expected to require 84
days in total. Any of the previouslydescribed methodologies could be
employed for in-water demolition work;
however, the Navy anticipates that those
methodologies producing underwater
sound with the potential to cause
incidental harassment of marine
mammals would only be required for
approximately one-quarter of the total
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effort. In-water demolition would
always occur concurrently with in-water
pile installation; therefore, sound
produced through in-water demolition
would always be subsumed by that
produced through in-water pile
installation. Pile removal activities are
not carried forward through the take
estimation process (see ‘‘Estimated
Incidental Take’’). Pile removal using
no-impact methods (e.g., dry pull) may
continue outside the in-water work
window.
report for details. Installation was
accomplished via a D19–42 American
Pile Driving Equipment, Inc. (APE)
diesel hammer with energy capacity of
23,566–42,800 ft-lbs and fitted with a
hydraulic tripping cylinder with four
adjustable power settings that could be
reset while driving. Pile removal was
accomplished by jetting and dead pull.
The IPP was described above. Nine
steel pipe test piles were vibratory- and
impact-driven over ten work days from
April 28 to May 15, 2014, including two
30-in and seven 36-in piles. For the IPP
TABLE 2—DETAILS OF PILES TO BE
all piles were initially installed initially
REMOVED
using an APE Variable Moment 250 VM
Vibratory Hammer Extractor powered by
Pile type
Number a model 765 hydraulic power source
creating a maximum driving force of
Concrete fender piles (14-, 18-,
and 24-in) ....................................
65 2,389 kilonewtons (269 tons). Impact
Plastic fender piles (13-in) ..............
29 pile driving equipment consisted of a
Timber piles (12-in) ........................
286 single acting diesel impact hammer
Concrete-filled steel caissons .........
22 model D62–22 DELMAG with energy
capacity of 76,899–153,799 ft-lbs and
Total ............................................
402 fitted with a hydraulic tripping cylinder
with four adjustable power settings that
Description of Work Accomplished
could be reset while driving. Two more
During the first in-water work season, 36-in piles are planned under the
currently proposed IHA for conclusion
two primary activities were conducted:
of the IPP.
Relocation of the Marine Mammal
Program and the IPP.
Description of Marine Mammals in the
The Navy Marine Mammal Program,
Area of the Specified Activity
administered by Space and Naval
Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR)
There are five marine mammal
Systems Center (SSC), was moved
species which are either resident, have
approximately three kilometers to the
known seasonal occurrence, or have
Naval Mine and Anti-submarine
been observed recently in San Diego
Warfare Command (NMAWC; see
Bay, including the California sea lion,
Figures 1–1 and 1–2 of the Navy’s
harbor seal, bottlenose dolphin,
monitoring report). Although not subject common dolphin, and gray whale. Note
to the MMPA, SSC’s working animals
that common dolphins could be either
were temporarily relocated so that they
short-beaked (Delphinus delphis
will not be affected by the project. Over
delphis) or long-beaked (D. capensis
the course of 25 in-water construction
capensis). While it is likely that
days from January 28 to March 13, 2014, common dolphins observed in the
the Navy removed thirty and installed
project area would be long-beaked, as it
81 concrete piles (12- and 16-in). See
is the most frequently stranded species
Table 3–2 of the Navy’s monitoring
in the area from San Diego Bay to the
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U.S.-Mexico border (Danil and St. Leger,
2011), the species distributions overlap
and it is unlikely that observers would
be able to differentiate them in the field.
Therefore, we consider that any
common dolphins observed—and any
incidental take of common dolphins—
could be either species. Navy records
and other survey results indicate that
other species that occur in the Southern
California Bight may have the potential
for isolated occurrence within San
Diego Bay or just offshore. The Pacific
white-sided dolphin (Lagenorhynchus
obliquidens) has been sighted along a
previously used transect on the opposite
side of the Point Loma peninsula
(Merkel and Associates, 2008). Risso’s
dolphin (Grampus griseus) is fairly
common in southern California coastal
waters (e.g., Campbell et al., 2010), but
has not been seen in San Diego Bay.
These species have not been observed
near the project area and are not
expected to occur there, and, given the
unlikelihood of their exposure to sound
generated from the project, are not
considered further.
We have reviewed the Navy’s detailed
species descriptions, including life
history information, for accuracy and
completeness and refer the reader to
Sections 3 and 4 of the Navy’s
application instead of reprinting the
information here. Please also refer to
NMFS’ Web site (www.nmfs.noaa.gov/
pr/species/mammals) for generalized
species accounts and to the Navy’s
Marine Resource Assessment for the
Southern California and Point Mugu
Operating Areas, which provides
information regarding the biology and
behavior of the marine resources that
may occur in those operating areas
(DoN, 2008). The document is publicly
available at www.navfac.navy.mil/
products_and_services/ev/products_
and_services/marine_resources/marine_
resource_assessments.html (accessed
August 23, 2014). In addition, we
provided information for the potentially
affected stocks, including details of
stock-wide status, trends, and threats, in
our Federal Register notice of proposed
authorization associated with the firstyear IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013)
and refer the reader to that document
rather than reprinting the information
here.
Table 3 lists the marine mammal
species with expected potential for
occurrence in the vicinity of NBPL
during the project timeframe and
summarizes key information regarding
stock status and abundance. See also
Figure 3–2 of the Navy’s application for
observed occurrence of marine
mammals in the project area.
Taxonomically, we follow Committee
on Taxonomy (2014). Please see NMFS’
Stock Assessment Reports (SAR),
available at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars,
for more detailed accounts of these
stocks’ status and abundance. All
potentially affected species are
addressed in the Pacific SARs (Carretta
et al., 2014).
TABLE 3—MARINE MAMMALS POTENTIALLY PRESENT IN THE VICINITY OF NBPL
Species
ESA/MMPA
status; strategic
(Y/N) 1
Stock
Stock abundance
(CV, Nmin, most recent
abundance survey) 2
PBR 3
Annual
M/SI 4
Relative occurrence in
San Diego Bay; season
of occurrence
Order Cetartiodactyla—Cetacea—Superfamily Mysticeti (baleen whales)
Family Eschrichtiidae:
Gray whale ..............
Eastern North Pacific .....
—; N
19,126 (0.071; 18,017;
2007).
558
6 127
Rare migratory visitor;
late winter.
Superfamily Odontoceti (toothed whales, dolphins, and porpoises)
Family Delphinidae:
Bottlenose dolphin ...
Short-beaked common dolphin.
Long-beaked common dolphin.
California coastal ...........
California/Oregon/Washington.
—; N
—; N
323 5 (0.13; 290; 2005) ..
411,211 (0.21; 343,990;
2008).
California ........................
—; N
107,016 (0.42; 76,224;
2009).
2.4
3,440
0.2
64
610
13.8
Occasional; year-round.
Rare; year-round (but
more common in
warm season).
Rare; year-round (but
more common in
warm season).
Order Carnivora—Superfamily Pinnipedia
U.S. ................................
—; N
296,750 (n/a; 153,337;
2008).
9,200
≥431
Abundant; year-round.
Family Phocidae (earless
seals):
Harbor seal ..............
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Family Otariidae (eared
seals and sea lions):
California sea lion ....
California ........................
—; N
30,196 (0.157; 26,667;
2009).
1,600
31
Uncommon and localized; year-round.
1 Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (—) indicates that the species is
not listed under the ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct
human-caused mortality exceeds PBR (see footnote 3) or which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the
foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed under the ESA is automatically designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
2 CV is coefficient of variation; N
min is the minimum estimate of stock abundance. In some cases, CV is not applicable. For certain stocks of
pinnipeds, abundance estimates are based upon observations of animals (often pups) ashore multiplied by some correction factor derived from
knowledge of the specie’s (or similar species’) life history to arrive at a best abundance estimate; therefore, there is no associated CV. In these
cases, the minimum abundance may represent actual counts of all animals ashore.
3 Potential biological removal, defined by the MMPA as the maximum number of animals, not including natural mortalities, that may be removed from a marine mammal stock while allowing that stock to reach or maintain its optimum sustainable population size (OSP).
4 These values, found in NMFS’ SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g.,
commercial fisheries, subsistence hunting, ship strike). Annual M/SI often cannot be determined precisely and is in some cases presented as a
minimum value.
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5 This value is based on photographic mark-recapture surveys conducted along the San Diego coast in 2004–05, but is considered a likely underestimate, as it does not reflect that approximately 35 percent of dolphins encountered lack identifiable dorsal fin marks (Defran and Weller,
1999). If 35 percent of all animals lack distinguishing marks, then the true population size would be closer to 450–500 animals (Carretta et al.,
2014).
6 Includes annual Russian harvest of 123 whales.
California Sea Lion
The California sea lion is by far the
most commonly-sighted pinniped
species at sea or on land in the vicinity
of NBPL and northern San Diego Bay,
where there is a resident non-breeding
population. California sea lions
regularly occur on rocks, buoys and
other structures, and especially on the
bait barges present in the bay adjacent
to NBPL (see Figure 4–1 of the Navy’s
application), although numbers vary
greatly as individuals move between the
bay and rookeries on offshore islands.
Different age classes of California sea
lions are found in the San Diego region
throughout the year (Lowry et al., 1992),
although Navy surveys show that the
local population comprises adult
females and subadult males and
females, with adult males being
uncommon. The Navy has conducted
marine mammal surveys throughout the
north San Diego Bay project area
(Merkel and Associates, 2008; Johnson,
2010, 2011; Lerma, 2012, 2014).
Sightings include all animals observed
and their locations (using geographical
positioning systems). The majority of
observations are of animals hauled out.
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Harbor Seal
Harbor seals are relatively uncommon
within San Diego Bay, and do not have
a significant mainland California
distribution south of Point Mugu.
Sightings in the Navy transect surveys
of northern San Diego Bay cited above
have generally been limited to
individuals outside of the project area,
on the south side of Ballast Point. The
haul-out area south of Ballast Point is
only temporary with overwash of the
rocks occurring daily; primary local
harbor seal haul-outs are in La Jolla.
With heavy vessel traffic and noise in
the project area, it is likely that harbor
seals seen outside the project area at
Ballast Point move toward Point Loma
and preferred foraging habitat rather
than actively foraging in or transiting
the project area on a frequent basis.
However, Navy marine mammal
monitoring for another project
conducted intermittently from 2010–12
documented several harbor seals near
Pier 122 (within the project area) at
various times, with the greatest number
of sightings during April and May.
Subsequently, Navy monitoring
conducted during year one of the fuel
pier project documented increased
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numbers of harbor seals in the project
area (Lerma, 2014). Approximately
three-quarters of these observations
were of animals hauled out along the
NBPL shoreline.
Gray Whale
Two populations of gray whales are
recognized, Eastern and Western North
Pacific (ENP and WNP). ENP whales
breed and calve primarily in areas off
Baja California and in the Gulf of
California. From February to May,
whales typically migrate northbound to
summer/fall feeding areas in the
Chukchi and northern Bering Seas, with
the southbound return to calving areas
typically occurring in November and
December. WNP whales are known to
feed in the Okhotsk Sea and off of
Kamchatka before migrating south to
poorly known wintering grounds,
possibly in the South China Sea.
The two populations have historically
been considered geographically isolated
from each other; however, recent data
from satellite-tracked whales indicates
that there is some overlap between the
stocks. Two WNP whales were tracked
from Russian foraging areas along the
Pacific rim to Baja California (Mate et
al., 2011), and, in one case where the
satellite tag remained attached to the
whale for a longer period, a WNP whale
was tracked from Russia to Mexico and
back again (IWC, 2012). Between 22–24
WNP whales are known to have
occurred in the eastern Pacific through
comparisons of ENP and WNP photoidentification catalogs (IWC, 2012;
Weller et al., 2011; Burdin et al., 2011),
and WNP animals comprised 8.1
percent of gray whales identified during
a recent field season off of Vancouver
Island (Weller et al., 2012). In addition,
two genetic matches of WNP whales
have been recorded off of Santa Barbara,
CA (Lang et al., 2011). More recently,
Urban et al. (2013) compared catalogs of
photo-identified individuals from
Mexico with photographs of whales off
Russia and reported a total of 21
matches. Therefore, a portion of the
WNP population is assumed to migrate,
at least in some years, to the eastern
Pacific during the winter breeding
season.
However, only ENP whales are
expected to occur in the project area.
The likelihood of any gray whale being
exposed to project sound to the degree
considered in this document is already
low, as it would require a migrating
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whale to linger for an extended period
of time, or for multiple migrating whales
to linger for shorter periods of time.
While such an occurrence is not
unknown, it is uncommon. Further, of
the approximately 20,000 gray whales
migrating through the Southern
California Bight, it is extremely unlikely
that one found in San Diego Bay would
be one of the approximately twenty
WNP whales that have been
documented in the eastern Pacific (less
than one percent probability). The
likelihood that a WNP whale would be
exposed to elevated levels of sound
from the specified activities is
insignificant and discountable and WNP
whales are not considered further in this
document.
Peak abundance of gray whales off the
coast of San Diego is typically during
January during the southbound
migration and in March as whales
return north, although females with
calves, which depart Mexico later than
males or females without calves, can be
sighted from March through May or
June (Leatherwood, 1974; Poole, 1984;
Rugh et al., 2001). Gray whales are not
expected in the project area except
during the northward migration, when
they are closest to the coast and may be
infrequently observed offshore of San
Diego Bay (Rice et al., 1981). Migrating
gray whales that do transit nearshore
waters would likely be traveling, rather
than foraging, and would likely be
present only briefly at typical travel
speeds of 3 kn (Perryman et al., 1999,
´
Mate and Urban-Ramirez, 2003). Gray
whales are known to occur near the
mouth of San Diego Bay, and
occasionally enter the bay. However,
their occurrence in San Diego Bay is
sporadic and unpredictable. In recent
years, local records show that solitary
individuals have entered the bay and
remained for varying lengths of time
during March 2009, April 2010, and July
2011. Navy field notes show an
occurrence of one gray whale that
lingered in the northern part of the bay
for two weeks.
Bottlenose Dolphin
As seen in the Navy’s marine mammal
surveys of San Diego Bay, cited above,
coastal bottlenose dolphins have
occurred within San Diego Bay
sporadically and in variable numbers
and locations. California coastal
bottlenose dolphins show little site
fidelity and likely move within their
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home range in response to patchy
concentrations of nearshore prey
(Defran et al., 1999, Bearzi et al., 2009).
After finding concentrations of prey,
animals may then forage within a more
limited spatial extent to take advantage
of this local accumulation until such
time that prey abundance is reduced,
likely then shifting location once again
and possibly covering larger distances.
Navy surveys frequently result in no
observations of bottlenose dolphins, and
sightings have ranged from 0–8 groups
observed (0–40 individuals).
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Common Dolphin
Common dolphins are present in the
coastal waters outside of San Diego Bay,
but are considered to be an intermittent
and transient visitor to the bay itself and
had not been observed within the bay
during Navy surveys conducted prior to
the project. However, common dolphins
were observed within the bay on three
occasions (twelve, five, and two
individuals) on two separate days
during monitoring conducted during the
IPP. Sightings of long-beaked common
dolphins are predominantly near shore,
whereas those of short-beaked common
dolphins extend throughout the coastal
and offshore waters (Carretta et al.
2014). The long-beaked common
dolphin has been documented during
Navy training exercises just offshore and
to the south of San Diego Bay (Danil and
St. Leger, 2011), whereas the shortbeaked species has not.
Potential Effects of the Specified
Activity on Marine Mammals
This section is intended to provide a
summary and discussion of the ways
that components of the specified
activity may impact marine mammals.
This discussion includes reactions that
we consider to rise to the level of a take
and those that we do not consider to rise
to the level of a take (for example, with
acoustics, we may include a discussion
of studies that showed animals not
reacting at all to sound or exhibiting
barely measurable avoidance). This
information is provided as a background
of potential effects and does not
consider either the specific manner in
which this activity will be carried out or
the mitigation that will be implemented,
and how either of those will shape the
anticipated impacts from this specific
activity. The ‘‘Estimated Take by
Incidental Harassment’’ section later in
this document will include a
quantitative analysis of the number of
individuals that are expected to be taken
by this activity. The ‘‘Negligible Impact
Analysis’’ section will include the
analysis of how this specific activity
will impact marine mammals and will
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consider the content of this section, the
‘‘Estimated Take by Incidental
Harassment’’ section, the ‘‘Proposed
Mitigation’’ section, and the
‘‘Anticipated Effects on Marine Mammal
Habitat’’ section to draw conclusions
regarding the likely impacts of this
activity on the reproductive success or
survivorship of individuals and from
that on the affected marine mammal
populations or stocks.
In our Federal Register notice of
proposed authorization associated with
the first-year IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23,
2013), we described in detail the
potential effects of the Navy’s proposed
activity on marine mammals, including
general background information on
sound and marine mammal hearing and
a description of sound sources and
ambient sound. Rather than reprint the
information here, we refer the reader to
that document. However, because these
terms are used frequently in this
document, we provide brief definitions
of relevant acoustic terminology below:
• Sound Pressure Level (SPL): Sound
pressure is the force per unit area,
usually expressed in microPascals (mPa),
where one Pascal equals one Newton
exerted over an area of one square
meter. The SPL is expressed in decibels
(dB) as twenty times the logarithm to
the base ten of the ratio between the
pressure exerted by the sound to a
referenced sound pressure. SPL is the
quantity that is directly measured by a
sound level meter. For underwater
sound, SPL in dB is referenced to one
microPascal (re 1 mPa), unless otherwise
stated. For airborne sound, SPL in dB is
referenced to 20 microPascals (re 20
mPa), unless otherwise stated.
• Frequency: Frequency is expressed
in terms of oscillations, or cycles, per
second. Cycles per second are
commonly referred to as hertz (Hz).
Typical human hearing ranges from 20
Hz to 20 kilohertz (kHz).
• Peak sound pressure: The
instantaneous maximum of the absolute
positive or negative pressure over the
frequency range from 20 Hz to 20 kHz
and presented in dB.
• Root mean square SPL: For impact
pile driving, overall dB rms levels are
characterized by integrating sound for
each waveform across ninety percent of
the acoustic energy in each wave and
averaging all waves in the pile driving
event. This value is referred to as the
rms 90%. With this method, the time
averaging per pulse varies.
• Sound Exposure Level (SEL): A
measure of energy, specifically the dB
level of the time integral of the squaredinstantaneous sound pressure,
normalized to a one second period. It is
a useful metric for assessing cumulative
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exposure because it enables sounds of
differing duration, to be compared in
terms of total energy. The accumulated
SEL (SELcum) is used to describe the SEL
from multiple events (e.g., many pile
strikes). This can be calculated directly
as a logarithmic sum of the individual
single-strike SELs for the pile strikes
that were used to install the pile.
• Level Z weighted (unweighted),
equivalent (LZeq): LZeq is a value
recorded by the SLM that represents
SEL SPL over a specified time period or
interval. The LZeq is most typically
referred to in one-second intervals or
over an entire event.
• Level Z weighted (unweighted), fast
(LZFmax): LZFmax is a value recorded by
the SLM that represents the maximum
rms value recorded for any 125
millisecond time frame during each
individual recording.
Anticipated Effects on Habitat
In our Federal Register notice of
proposed authorization associated with
the first-year IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23,
2013), we described in detail the
anticipated effects of the Navy’s
proposed activity on marine mammal
habitat, including effects to prey and to
foraging habitat. Rather than reprint the
information here, we refer the reader to
that document.
In summary, given the short daily
duration of sound associated with
individual pile driving events and the
relatively small areas being affected,
pile driving activities associated with
the proposed action are not likely to
have a permanent, adverse effect on any
fish habitat, or populations of fish
species. The area around NBPL is
heavily altered with significant levels of
industrial and recreational activity, and
is unlikely to harbor significant amounts
of forage fish. Thus, any impacts to
marine mammal habitat are not
expected to cause significant or longterm consequences for individual
marine mammals or their populations.
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under
Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA,
NMFS must set forth the permissible
methods of taking pursuant to such
activity, and other means of effecting
the least practicable impact on such
species or stock and its habitat, paying
particular attention to rookeries, mating
grounds, and areas of similar
significance, and on the availability of
such species or stock for taking for
certain subsistence uses.
The mitigation strategies described
below largely follow those required and
successfully implemented under the
first-year IHA. For this proposed IHA,
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data from acoustic monitoring
conducted during the first year of work
was used to estimate zones of influence
(ZOIs; see ‘‘Estimated Take by
Incidental Harassment’’); these values
were used to develop mitigation
measures for pile driving activities at
NBPL. The ZOIs effectively represent
the mitigation zone that would be
established around each pile to prevent
Level A harassment to marine
mammals, while providing estimates of
the areas within which Level B
harassment might occur. In addition to
the measures described later in this
section, the Navy would employ the
following standard mitigation measures:
(a) Conduct briefings between
construction supervisors and crews,
marine mammal monitoring team,
acoustical monitoring team, and Navy
staff prior to the start of all pile driving
activity, and when new personnel join
the work, in order to explain
responsibilities, communication
procedures, marine mammal monitoring
protocol, and operational procedures.
(b) For in-water heavy machinery
work with the potential to affect marine
mammals (other than pile driving), if a
marine mammal comes within 10 m,
operations shall cease and vessels shall
reduce speed to the minimum level
required to maintain steerage and safe
working conditions. This type of work
could include the following activities:
(1) Movement of the barge to the pile
location and (2) removal of the pile from
the water column/substrate via a crane
(i.e., dead pull). For these activities,
monitoring would take place from 15
minutes prior to initiation until the
action is complete.
Monitoring and Shutdown for Pile
Driving
The following measures would apply
to the Navy’s mitigation through
shutdown and disturbance zones:
Shutdown Zone—For all pile driving
and removal activities, the Navy will
establish a shutdown zone intended to
contain the area in which SPLs equal or
exceed the 180/190 decibel (dB) root
mean square (rms) acoustic injury
criteria. The purpose of a shutdown
zone is to define an area within which
shutdown of activity would occur upon
sighting of a marine mammal (or in
anticipation of an animal entering the
defined area), thus preventing injury of
marine mammals (serious injury or
death are unlikely outcomes even in the
absence of mitigation measures). Radial
distances for shutdown zones are shown
in Table 7. For certain activities, the
shutdown zone would not exist because
source levels are lower than the
threshold, or the source levels indicate
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that the radial distance to the threshold
would be less than 10 m. However, a
minimum shutdown zone of 10 m will
be established during all pile driving
and removal activities, regardless of the
estimated zone. These precautionary
measures are intended to prevent the
already unlikely possibility of physical
interaction with construction equipment
and to establish a precautionary
minimum zone with regard to acoustic
effects.
Disturbance Zone—Disturbance zones
are the areas in which SPLs equal or
exceed 160 and 120 dB rms (for impulse
and continuous sound, respectively).
Disturbance zones provide utility for
monitoring conducted for mitigation
purposes (i.e., shutdown zone
monitoring) by establishing monitoring
protocols for areas adjacent to the
shutdown zones. Monitoring of
disturbance zones enables observers to
be aware of and communicate the
presence of marine mammals in the
project area but outside the shutdown
zone and thus prepare for potential
shutdowns of activity. However, the
primary purpose of disturbance zone
monitoring is for documenting incidents
of Level B harassment; disturbance zone
monitoring is discussed in greater detail
later (see ‘‘Proposed Monitoring and
Reporting’’). Nominal radial distances
for disturbance zones are shown in
Table 7.
In order to document observed
incidences of harassment, monitors
record all marine mammal observations,
regardless of location. The observer’s
location, as well as the location of the
pile being driven, is known from a GPS.
The location of the animal is estimated
as a distance from the observer, which
is then compared to the location from
the pile. If acoustic monitoring is being
conducted for that pile, a received SPL
may be estimated, or the received level
may be estimated on the basis of past or
subsequent acoustic monitoring. It may
then be determined whether the animal
was exposed to sound levels
constituting incidental harassment in
post-processing of observational and
acoustic data, and a precise accounting
of observed incidences of harassment
created. Therefore, although the
predicted distances to behavioral
harassment thresholds are useful for
estimating incidental harassment for
purposes of authorizing levels of
incidental take, actual take may be
determined in part through the use of
empirical data.
Monitoring Protocols—Monitoring
would be conducted before, during, and
after pile driving activities. In addition,
observers shall record all incidents of
marine mammal occurrence, regardless
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of distance from activity, and shall
document any behavioral reactions in
concert with distance from piles being
driven. Observations made outside the
shutdown zone will not result in
shutdown; that pile segment would be
completed without cessation, unless the
animal approaches or enters the
shutdown zone, at which point all pile
driving activities would be halted.
Monitoring will take place from fifteen
minutes prior to initiation through
thirty minutes post-completion of pile
driving activities. Pile driving activities
include the time to remove a single pile
or series of piles, as long as the time
elapsed between uses of the pile driving
equipment is no more than thirty
minutes. Please see the Acoustic and
Marine Species Monitoring Plan
(available at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/
permits/incidental.htm) for full details
of the monitoring protocols.
The following additional measures
apply to visual monitoring:
(1) Monitoring will be conducted by
qualified observers, who will be placed
at the best vantage point(s) practicable
(as defined in the Marine Mammal
Monitoring Plan) to monitor for marine
mammals and implement shutdown/
delay procedures when applicable by
calling for the shutdown to the hammer
operator. Qualified observers are trained
biologists, with the following minimum
qualifications:
• Visual acuity in both eyes
(correction is permissible) sufficient for
discernment of moving targets at the
water’s surface with ability to estimate
target size and distance; use of
binoculars may be necessary to correctly
identify the target;
• Advanced education in biological
science or related field (undergraduate
degree or higher is required);
• Experience and ability to conduct
field observations and collect data
according to assigned protocols (this
may include academic experience);
• Experience or training in the field
identification of marine mammals,
including the identification of
behaviors;
• Sufficient training, orientation, or
experience with the construction
operation to provide for personal safety
during observations;
• Writing skills sufficient to prepare a
report of observations including but not
limited to the number and species of
marine mammals observed; dates and
times when in-water construction
activities were conducted; dates and
times when in-water construction
activities were suspended to avoid
potential incidental injury from
construction sound of marine mammals
observed within a defined shutdown
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zone; and marine mammal behavior;
and
• Ability to communicate orally, by
radio or in person, with project
personnel to provide real-time
information on marine mammals
observed in the area as necessary.
(2) Prior to the start of pile driving
activity, the shutdown zone will be
monitored for fifteen minutes to ensure
that it is clear of marine mammals. Pile
driving will only commence once
observers have declared the shutdown
zone clear of marine mammals; animals
will be allowed to remain in the
shutdown zone (i.e., must leave of their
own volition) and their behavior will be
monitored and documented. The
shutdown zone may only be declared
clear, and pile driving started, when the
entire shutdown zone is visible (i.e.,
when not obscured by dark, rain, fog,
etc.). In addition, if such conditions
should arise during impact pile driving
that is already underway, the activity
would be halted.
(3) If a marine mammal approaches or
enters the shutdown zone during the
course of pile driving operations,
activity will be halted and delayed until
either the animal has voluntarily left
and been visually confirmed beyond the
shutdown zone or fifteen minutes have
passed without re-detection of the
animal. Monitoring will be conducted
throughout the time required to drive a
pile.
Sound Attenuation Devices
The use of bubble curtains to reduce
underwater sound from impact pile
driving was considered prior to the start
of the project but was determined to not
be practicable. Use of a bubble curtain
in a channel with substantial current
may not be effective, as unconfined
bubbles are likely to be swept away and
confined curtain systems may be
difficult to deploy effectively in high
currents. Data gathered during
monitoring of construction on the San
Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge indicated
that no reduction in the overall linear
sound level resulted from use of a
bubble curtain in deep water with
relatively strong current, and the
distance to the 190 dB zone was
considered to be the same with and
without the bubble curtain (Illingworth
& Rodkin, 2001). During project
monitoring for pile driving associated
with the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge,
also in San Francisco Bay, it was
observed that performance in moderate
current was significantly reduced
(Oestman et al., 2009). Lucke et al.
(2011) also note that the effectiveness of
most currently used curtain designs may
be compromised in stronger currents
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and greater water depths. We believe
that conditions (relatively deep water
and strong tidal currents of up to 3 kn)
at the project site would disperse the
bubbles and compromise the
effectiveness of sound attenuation.
Timing Restrictions
In-order to avoid impacts to least tern
populations when they are most likely
to be foraging and nesting, in-water
work will be concentrated from October
1–March 31. However, this limitation is
in accordance with agreements between
the Navy and FWS, and is not a
requirement of this proposed IHA. All
in-water construction activities would
occur only during daylight hours
(sunrise to sunset).
Soft-Start
The use of a soft start procedure is
believed to provide additional
protection to marine mammals by
warning or providing a chance to leave
the area prior to the hammer operating
at full capacity, and typically involves
a requirement to initiate sound from the
hammer at reduced energy followed by
a waiting period. This procedure is
repeated two additional times. It is
difficult to specify the reduction in
energy for any given hammer because of
variation across drivers and, for impact
hammers, the actual number of strikes at
reduced energy will vary because
operating the hammer at less than full
power results in ‘‘bouncing’’ of the
hammer as it strikes the pile, resulting
in multiple ‘‘strikes.’’ The project will
utilize soft start techniques for both
impact and vibratory pile driving. We
require the Navy to initiate sound from
vibratory hammers for fifteen seconds at
reduced energy followed by a thirtysecond waiting period, with the
procedure repeated two additional
times. For impact driving, we require an
initial set of three strikes from the
impact hammer at reduced energy,
followed by a thirty-second waiting
period, then two subsequent three strike
sets. Soft start will be required at the
beginning of each day’s pile driving
work and at any time following a
cessation of pile driving of thirty
minutes or longer (specific to either
vibratory or impact driving).
We have carefully evaluated the
Navy’s proposed mitigation measures
and considered their effectiveness in
past implementation to preliminarily
determine whether they are likely to
effect the least practicable impact on the
affected marine mammal species and
stocks and their habitat. Our evaluation
of potential measures included
consideration of the following factors in
relation to one another: (1) The manner
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in which, and the degree to which, the
successful implementation of the
measure is expected to minimize
adverse impacts to marine mammals, (2)
the proven or likely efficacy of the
specific measure to minimize adverse
impacts as planned; and (3) the
practicability of the measure for
applicant implementation.
Any mitigation measure(s) we
prescribe should be able to accomplish,
have a reasonable likelihood of
accomplishing (based on current
science), or contribute to the
accomplishment of one or more of the
general goals listed below:
(1) Avoidance or minimization of
injury or death of marine mammals
wherever possible (goals 2, 3, and 4 may
contribute to this goal).
(2) A reduction in the number (total
number or number at biologically
important time or location) of
individual marine mammals exposed to
stimuli expected to result in incidental
take (this goal may contribute to 1,
above, or to reducing takes by
behavioral harassment only).
(3) A reduction in the number (total
number or number at biologically
important time or location) of times any
individual marine mammal would be
exposed to stimuli expected to result in
incidental take (this goal may contribute
to 1, above, or to reducing takes by
behavioral harassment only).
(4) A reduction in the intensity of
exposure to stimuli expected to result in
incidental take (this goal may contribute
to 1, above, or to reducing the severity
of behavioral harassment only).
(5) Avoidance or minimization of
adverse effects to marine mammal
habitat, paying particular attention to
the prey base, blockage or limitation of
passage to or from biologically
important areas, permanent destruction
of habitat, or temporary disturbance of
habitat during a biologically important
time.
(6) For monitoring directly related to
mitigation, an increase in the
probability of detecting marine
mammals, thus allowing for more
effective implementation of the
mitigation.
Based on our evaluation of the Navy’s
proposed measures, as well as any other
potential measures that may be relevant
to the specified activity, we have
preliminarily determined that the
proposed mitigation measures provide
the means of effecting the least
practicable impact on marine mammal
species or stocks and their habitat,
paying particular attention to rookeries,
mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance.
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Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA for an
activity, Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the
MMPA states that NMFS must set forth
‘‘requirements pertaining to the
monitoring and reporting of such
taking’’. The MMPA implementing
regulations at 50 CFR 216.104(a)(13)
indicate that requests for incidental take
authorizations must include the
suggested means of accomplishing the
necessary monitoring and reporting that
will result in increased knowledge of
the species and of the level of taking or
impacts on populations of marine
mammals that are expected to be
present in the proposed action area.
Any monitoring requirement we
prescribe should improve our
understanding of one or more of the
following:
• Occurrence of marine mammal
species in action area (e.g., presence,
abundance, distribution, density).
• Nature, scope, or context of likely
marine mammal exposure to potential
stressors/impacts (individual or
cumulative, acute or chronic), through
better understanding of: (1) Action or
environment (e.g., source
characterization, propagation, ambient
noise); (2) Affected species (e.g., life
history, dive patterns); (3) Cooccurrence of marine mammal species
with the action; or (4) Biological or
behavioral context of exposure (e.g., age,
calving or feeding areas).
• Individual responses to acute
stressors, or impacts of chronic
exposures (behavioral or physiological).
• How anticipated responses to
stressors impact either: (1) Long-term
fitness and survival of an individual; or
(2) Population, species, or stock.
• Effects on marine mammal habitat
and resultant impacts to marine
mammals.
• Mitigation and monitoring
effectiveness.
Please see the Acoustic and Marine
Species Monitoring Plan (available at
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/
incidental.htm) for full details of the
requirements for monitoring and
reporting. Notional monitoring locations
(for biological and acoustic monitoring)
are shown in Figure 3–1 of the Plan. The
purpose of this Plan is to provide
protocols for acoustic and marine
mammal monitoring implemented
during pile driving and removal
activities associated with the
completion of the IPP, as well as the
initial production phase of the fuel pier
replacement. We have preliminarily
determined this monitoring plan, which
is summarized here and which largely
follows the monitoring strategies
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required and successfully implemented
under the first-year IHA, to be sufficient
to meet the MMPA’s monitoring and
reporting requirements. The previous
monitoring plan was modified to
integrate adaptive changes to the
monitoring methodologies as well as
updates to the scheduled construction
activities. Monitoring objectives are as
follows:
• Monitor in-water construction
activities: (1) Implement in-situ acoustic
monitoring efforts to continue to
measure SPLs from in-water
construction activities not previously
monitored or validated during the
previous IHA; (2) collect and evaluate
acoustic sound levels for ten percent of
the pile driving activities conducted
along the outboard section of the fuel
pier sufficient to confirm measured
contours associated with the acoustic
ZOIs; (3) collect acoustic sound
recordings sufficient to document sound
source levels for vibratory and
pneumatic chipping activities for the
first ten percent of the proposed piles to
be removed along the outboard section.
• Monitor marine mammal
occurrence and behavior during inwater construction activities to
minimize marine mammal impacts and
effectively document marine mammals
occurring within ZOI boundaries.
• Continue the collection of ambient
underwater sound measurements in the
absence of project activities to develop
a rigorous baseline for the project area.
Acoustic Measurements
The primary purpose of acoustic
monitoring is to empirically verify
modeled injury and behavioral
disturbance zones (defined at radial
distances to NMFS-specified thresholds
of 160-, 180-, and 190-dB (rms) for
underwater sound (where applicable)
and 90- and 100-dB (unweighted) for
airborne sound; see ‘‘Estimated Take by
Incidental Harassment’’ below). For
non-pulsed sound, distances will be
determined for attenuation to the point
at which sound becomes
indistinguishable from background
levels. Empirical acoustic monitoring
data will be used to document
transmission loss values determined
from measurements collected during the
IPP and examine site-specific
differences in SPL and affected ZOIs on
an as needed basis.
Should monitoring results indicate it
is appropriate to do so, marine mammal
mitigation zones would be revised as
necessary to encompass actual ZOIs in
subsequent years of the fuel pier
replacement project. Acoustic
monitoring will be conducted as
specified in the approved Acoustic and
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Marine Species Monitoring Plan. Please
see Table 2–2 of the Plan for a list of
equipment to be used during acoustic
monitoring.
Some details of the methodology
include:
• Hydroacoustic monitoring for
vibratory and impact driving of steel
piles in areas bayward of the existing
fuel pier will occur during the first ten
percent of all pile driving events in
order to document SPLs at the measured
distances to the injury isopleths. In
conjunction with measurements of SPLs
at the source (10 m) and shutdown
(approximately 300 m, or intermediate
of the pinniped and cetacean shutdown
ZOIs) monitoring locations, there will
also be intermittent verification of the
disturbance ZOIs throughout pile
driving. Of the ten percent of pile
driving events acoustically measured,
one hundred percent of the data will be
analyzed. The resulting data set will be
analyzed to examine and confirm SPLs
and rates of transmission loss for each
separate in-water construction activity.
The Navy will also conduct acoustic
monitoring for pile removal activities
that utilize equipment and/or methods
not previously evaluated (e.g., vibratory
removal and pneumatic chipping).
• For underwater recordings, sound
level meter systems will follow methods
in accordance with NMFS’ 2012
guidance for the collection of source
levels.
• For airborne recordings, to the
extent that logistics and security allow,
reference recordings will be collected at
approximately 15 m from the source via
a sound meter with integrated
microphone. Other distances may also
be utilized to obtain better data if the
signal cannot be isolated clearly due to
other sound sources (e.g., barges or
generators).
• Hydrophones will be placed using a
static line deployed from a stationary
(temporarily moored) vessel. Locations
of acoustic recordings will be collected
via GPS. A depth sounder and/or
weighted tape measure will be used to
determine the depth of the water. The
hydrophone will be attached to a
weighted nylon cord to maintain a
constant depth.
• Each hydrophone (underwater) and
microphone (airborne) will be calibrated
at the start of the monitoring time frame
and applicable systems will be checked
at the beginning of each day of
monitoring activity.
• For each monitored location, a
hydrophone will be deployed at middepth in order to evaluate site specific
attenuation and propagation
characteristics.
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• In order to determining the area
encompassed by the relevant isopleths
for marine mammals, hydrophones will
collect data at various distances from
the source to accurately capture
deviations in the pressure levels as well
as examine geospatial differences in the
spreading loss model caused by
physical conditions and bathymetric
properties throughout the sound field.
• Ambient conditions, both airborne
and underwater, will be measured at the
project site in the absence of
construction activities to determine
background sound levels. Ambient
levels will be recorded over the
frequency range from 7 Hz to 20 kHz.
Ambient conditions will be recorded at
least three times during the IHA period
consistent with NMFS’ 2012 guidance
for the measurement of ambient sound.
Each time, data will be collected for
eight-hour periods for three days during
typical working hours (7:00 a.m. to 4:00
p.m., Monday through Friday) in the
absence of in-water construction
activities. The three recording periods
will be spaced to adequately capture
variation across the notional work
window (October–March).
• Underwater SPLs would be
measured at the source and at the
shutdown ZOIs for the entire duration
of each recoded event. The SPLs will be
monitored in real time by observing the
LZeq (1 sec) expressed in dB during each
pile driving event. Acoustic data
recordings will be post-processed to
determine maximum rms SPLs. Sound
levels will be measured in Pascals (a
unit of pressure), which are easily
converted to dB.
• Airborne levels would be recorded
as unweighted in dB and the distance to
marine mammal behavioral disturbance
thresholds would be calculated.
• Environmental data would be
collected including but not limited to:
Wind speed and direction, air
temperature, humidity, surface water
temperature, water depth, wave height,
weather conditions and other factors
that could contribute to influencing the
airborne and underwater sound levels
(e.g., aircraft, boats).
• The monitoring coordinator will
supply the acoustics specialist with the
substrate composition, hammer model
and size, hammer energy settings and
any changes to those settings during the
piles being monitored, depth of the pile
being driven, and blows per foot for the
piles monitored.
• For acoustically monitored piles,
data from the continuous monitoring
locations (10 m and ∼300 m from
source) will be post-processed to obtain
the maximum peak pressure level
recorded for all the strikes associated
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with each pile, expressed in dB. This
maximum value will originate from the
phase of pile driving during which
hammer energy was also at maximum
(referred to as Level 4).
• From all the strikes associated with
each pile occurring during the Level 4
phase these additional measures will be
made:
Æ Mean, minimum, and maximum
rms pressure level in dB
Æ mean duration of a pile strike
(based on the ninety percent energy
criterion)
Æ number of hammer strikes
Æ mean, minimum, and maximum
single strike Sound Exposure Level
(SEL) in [dB re mPa2 sec]
Æ cumulative SEL as defined by the
mean single strike SEL + 10*log (#
hammer strikes) in [dB re mPa2 sec]
Æ A frequency spectrum (pressure
spectral density) in [dB re mPa2 per Hz]
based on the average of up to eight
successive strikes with similar sound.
Spectral resolution will be 1 Hz and the
spectrum will cover nominal range from
7 Hz to 20 kHz.
Visual Marine Mammal Observations
The Navy will collect sighting data
and behavioral responses to
construction for marine mammal
species observed in the region of
activity during the period of activity. All
observers will be trained in marine
mammal identification and behaviors
and are required to have no other
construction-related tasks while
conducting monitoring. The Navy will
monitor the shutdown zone and
disturbance zone before, during, and
after pile driving as described under
‘‘Proposed Mitigation’’ and in the
Acoustic and Marine Species
Monitoring Plan, with observers located
at the best practicable vantage points.
Notional monitoring locations are
shown in Figures 3–1 of the Navy’s
Plan. Please see that plan, available at
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/
incidental.htm, for full details of the
required marine mammal monitoring.
Based on our requirements, the Navy
would implement the following
procedures for pile driving:
• MMOs would be located at the best
vantage point(s) in order to properly see
the entire shutdown zone and as much
of the disturbance zone as possible.
• During all observation periods,
observers will use binoculars and the
naked eye to search continuously for
marine mammals.
• If the shutdown zones are obscured
by fog or poor lighting conditions, pile
driving at that location will not be
initiated until that zone is visible.
Should such conditions arise while
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impact driving is underway, the activity
would be halted.
• The shutdown and disturbance
zones around the pile will be monitored
for the presence of marine mammals
before, during, and after any pile driving
or removal activity.
One MMO will be placed on the
active pile driving rig in order to
observe the respective shutdown zones
for vibratory and impact pile driving.
Monitoring would be primarily
dedicated to observing the shutdown
zone; however, MMOs would record all
marine mammal sightings beyond these
distances provided it did not interfere
with their effectiveness at carrying out
the shutdown procedures. Additionally,
three to seven land, pier, or vessel-based
MMOs will be positioned to monitor the
shutdown zones and the buffer zones
(one to the northeast and one to the
south at the mouth of San Diego Bay).
Because there are different threshold
distances for different types of marine
mammals (pinniped and cetacean), the
observation platform at the shutdown
zone will concentrate on the 190 dB rms
and 180 dB rms isopleths locations and
station the observers and vessels
accordingly. The MMOs associated with
these platforms will record all visible
marine mammal sightings. Confirmed
takes will be registered once the
sightings data has been overlaid with
the isopleths identified in Table 7 and
visualized in Figure 6–2 of the Navy’s
application, or based on refined acoustic
data, if amendments to the ZOIs are
needed. The acousticians on board will
be noting SPLs in real-time, but, to
avoid biasing the observations, will not
communicate that information directly
to the MMOs. These platforms may
move closer to, or farther from, the
source depending on whether received
SPLs are less than or greater than the
regulatory threshold values. All MMOs
will be in radio communication with
each other so that the MMOs will know
when to anticipate incoming marine
mammal species and when they are
tracking the same animals observed
elsewhere.
Individuals implementing the
monitoring protocol will assess its
effectiveness using an adaptive
approach. Monitoring biologists will use
their best professional judgment
throughout implementation and seek
improvements to these methods when
deemed appropriate. Any modifications
to protocol will be coordinated between
NMFS and the Navy.
Data Collection
We require that observers use
approved data forms. Among other
pieces of information, the Navy will
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record detailed information about any
implementation of shutdowns,
including the distance of animals to the
pile and description of specific actions
that ensued and resulting behavior of
the animal, if any. In addition, the Navy
will attempt to distinguish between the
number of individual animals taken and
the number of incidents of take. We
require that, at a minimum, the
following information be collected on
the sighting forms:
• Date and time that monitored
activity begins or ends;
• Construction activities occurring
during each observation period;
• Weather parameters (e.g., percent
cover, visibility);
• Water conditions (e.g., sea state,
tide state);
• Species, numbers, and, if possible,
sex and age class of marine mammals;
• Description of any observable
marine mammal behavior patterns,
including bearing and direction of travel
and distance from pile driving activity,
and if possible, the correlation to
measured SPLs;
• Distance from pile driving activities
to marine mammals and distance from
the marine mammals to the observation
point;
• Description of implementation of
mitigation measures (e.g., shutdown or
delay);
• Locations of all marine mammal
observations; and
• Other human activity in the area.
In addition, photographs would be
taken of any gray whales observed.
These photographs would be submitted
to NMFS’ West Coast Regional Office for
comparison with photo-identification
catalogs to determine whether the whale
is a member of the WNP population.
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Reporting
A draft report would be submitted to
NMFS within 45 calendar days of the
completion of marine mammal
monitoring, or sixty days prior to the
issuance of any subsequent IHA for this
project, whichever comes first. The
report will include marine mammal
observations pre-activity, duringactivity, and post-activity during pile
driving days, and will also provide
descriptions of any behavioral responses
to construction activities by marine
mammals and a complete description of
all mitigation shutdowns and the results
of those actions. A final report would be
prepared and submitted within thirty
days following resolution of comments
on the draft report. Required contents of
the monitoring reports are described in
more detail in the Navy’s Acoustic and
Marine Species Monitoring Plan.
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Monitoring Results From Previously
Authorized Activities
The Navy complied with the
mitigation and monitoring required
under the previous authorization for
this project. Acoustic and marine
mammal monitoring was implemented
as required, with marine mammal
monitoring occurring before, during,
and after each pile driving event. During
the course of these activities, the Navy
did not exceed the take levels
authorized under the IHA. However, the
Navy did record one observation of a
California sea lion within the defined
190-dB shutdown zone (see below for
further discussion).
The objectives of the monitoring plan
were largely similar to those described
above for the year two monitoring plan.
For acoustic monitoring, the primary
goal was to validate the acoustic ZOI
contours utilizing hydroacoustic
measurements collected during the IPP
to update estimated SPL contours
(isopleths) developed from the
transmission loss modeling effort
conducted prior to the start of the
project and to collect more data to
validate the transmission loss model. In
addition, acoustic monitoring was
conducted for pile driving of concrete
piles associated with the temporary
relocation of the Navy’s Marine
Mammal Program (see ‘‘Description of
Work Accomplished’’).
Acoustic Monitoring Results—For a
full description of acoustic monitoring
methodology, please see section 2.1.2 of
the Navy’s monitoring report, including
Figure 2–1 for representative monitoring
locations. Results are displayed in Table
4.
For acoustic monitoring associated
with the marine mammal relocation at
NMAWC, a continuous hydroacoustic
monitoring system was positioned at
source (10 m from the pile being
installed or removed) and at the edge of
the predicted outer limit of the 160-dB
behavioral ZOI for impact driving of
concrete piles, which was estimated to
be approximately 74 m. Hydrophones
were deployed from the dock, barge, or
moored vessel at half the water depth
measured by a weighed measuring tape
or calibrated depth sounder. The depth
in which pile driving took place ranged
between 2.4 and 4.7 m. SPLs measured
at the far-field varied in distance from
25 to 400 m from the installed pile to
determine variations in transmission
loss for individual piles and sites.
Airborne sound was collected at 15.2 m
and also at distances ranging from 30.5
to 122 m using SLMs mounted on
tripods at 1.5 m elevation above the
dock. Airborne sound measurements
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were collected intermittently, but in
sufficient amounts to determine
airborne ZOIs for pinniped species.
For monitoring associated with the
IPP at the fuel pier site, hydroacoustic
monitoring systems recorded
underwater sound levels from piers,
barges, or anchored vessels at source (10
m), shutdown (125 to 300 m), and at the
predicted far-field behavioral threshold
ZOI locations. Pile driving water depth
was <4.7 m for piles driven on the shore
side of the pier and ranged from 12–17
m for piles driven on the bay side of the
pier. The far-field locations were located
near Harbor Island to the northeast and
adjacent to the Zuniga Jetty to the
southeast (offshore) approximately
1,500 to 4,000 m from source from the
pile driving activities. For vibratory
driving, differences in average SPLs
between pile locations (inside versus
outside) was approximately 5 dB rms
less for same-sized inside piles, and
average maximum SPLs recorded for the
nine individual piles monitored varied
approximately 5 dB rms among all piles
with no measurable differences between
pile sizes. For impact driving, 36-in
piles produced on average
approximately 5 dB rms louder SPLs
than did 30-in piles. Measured zones for
impact driving were smaller for samesized inside piles due to increased
attenuation in shallower water and
increased acoustic interference from
existing piles. Airborne sound level
recordings were collected at 15.2 m and
at distances ranging from 93 to 400 m,
following the methodology described
above.
Maximum and average hydroacoustic
dB rms SPLs for concrete piles were
approximately 6 to 10 dB rms greater
than levels reported for similar piles
and methods elsewhere (e.g., Oestman
et al., 2009). The NMAWC project site
was relatively shallow at 2–4 m depth,
and acoustic boundary conditions
created by construction barges, existing
marina structures, and the narrow width
of the channel likely contributed to
variability in acoustic sound level
recording results. During the IPP,
measured SPLs for driving of 30- and
36-in steel pipe piles fell outside of
expected levels. SPLs for impact and
vibratory driving of 48-in steel pipe
piles and were reported to be 195 and
190 dB rms at source (10 m),
respectively (Oestman et al., 2009).
Hydroacoustic sound level recordings
collected and analyzed during the IPP
for vibratory and impact pile driving
recorded lower than expected values for
vibratory pile driving (approximately
170 dB rms) for both 30- and 36-in steel
pipe piles and greater than expected
(approximately 202 dB rms) values for
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impact pile driving. For further
discussion of these results, please see
the Navy’s monitoring report.
TABLE 4—ACOUSTIC MONITORING RESULTS
Location
NMAWC .....
IPP .............
IPP .............
IPP .............
Activity
Impact ...
Vibratory
Impact ...
Impact ...
Number
of piles
measured
Pile type
12- and 16-in concrete
30- and 36-in steel pipe
30-in steel pipe .............
36-in steel pipe .............
Average
underwater
SPL at
10 m
(dB rms)
Average
airborne
SPL at
15 m
(LZFmax)
58
9
2
7
182
167
195
200
108
113
................
Measured distances to relevant zones
(dB rms/dB unweighted) (m) 1
120
160
n/a
2 3,000
n/a
180
126
n/a
3 2,500
13
<10
3 450
190
<10
<10
3 75
90
728
233
100
105
71
1 Site-specific measured transmission loss values (both underwater and airborne) were used to calculate zone distances. See monitoring report
for more detail.
2 The 120-dB disturbance zone was initially modeled to be 6,470 m; however, ambient sound in the vicinity of the project site was measured at
approximately 128 dB rms (see below). This value was used in conjunction with a site-specific propagation model to arrive at a predicted distance of 3,000 m at which sound should attenuate to background levels. This was supported by collection of measured dB rms values for vibratory pile driving during the IPP, as signal could not be distinguished from background at similar distance.
3 These values are for outside piles. Measured distances to the 160/180/190 dB ZOIs for inside piles were 2,000/100/40 m (see above for discussion). Zones calculated on the basis of SPLs from 36-in piles.
Ambient data collection was
conducted in a manner consistent with
NMFS’ 2012 guidance for measurement
of background sound. Ambient
underwater and airborne sound level
recordings were collected for three
eight-hour days at NMAWC between
March 20–27, 2014, and for the IPP from
April 24 to May 23, 2014. Ambient
sound level recordings were collected in
the absence of construction activities,
and during typical construction time
periods (7 a.m. to 4 p.m.), at locations
that were between 400 and 1,000 m
from each site. Sites were chosen to
minimize boat traffic effects that might
impact results.
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Ambient hydroacoustic sound level
recordings conducted adjacent to the
fuel pier IPP project site during the
week prior to and following IPP pile
driving activities documented daily LZF
averages of approximately 128 dB (see
Figure 3–20 of the monitoring report).
The area adjacent to the project site is
a high traffic area supporting Navy fuel
operations and is within 500 m of the
main San Diego Bay navigation channel.
Spike measurements eclipsed 140 dB
with one instance reaching near 155 dB
(Figure 3–20). Values were consistent
with previous measured values and
were recorded within expected ranges.
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Marine Mammal Monitoring Results—
Marine mammal monitoring was
conducted as required under the IHA
and as described in the first-year
monitoring plan and in our Federal
Register notice of proposed
authorization associated with the firstyear IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013).
For a full description of monitoring
methodology, please see section 2.1.3 of
the Navy’s monitoring report, including
Figure 2–1 for representative monitoring
locations. Monitoring protocols were
managed adaptively during the course
of the first-year IHA. For example, as the
IPP project progressed, the Navy
realized that there were areas that were
within close proximity to pile driving
activities that could not be adequately
observed by a single MMO, and a pierbased secondary MMO was added. As a
result, three dock-, pier-, and bargebased MMOs (one in close proximity to
the pile being driven, and two in close
proximity to known haul out locations
for seals and sea lions to the north and
south of the pier) were used to provide
complete coverage for the shutdown
zones.
Monitoring results are presented in
Table 5. The Navy recorded all
observations of marine mammals,
including pre- and post-construction
monitoring efforts. Animals observed
during these periods or that were
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determined to be outside relevant ZOIs
were not considered to represent
incidents of take. Please see Figures 3–
8, 3–11, 3–22, 3–26, and 3–28 for
locations of observations and incidents
of take relative to the project sites. Take
authorization for the first-year
authorization was informed by an
assumption that 66 days of in-water
construction would occur, whereas only
35 total days actually occurred.
However, the actual observed rates per
day were in all cases lower than what
was assumed. Therefore, we expect that
the Navy would not have exceeded the
take allowances even if the full 66 days
had been reached.
As noted above, an individual
California sea lion was observed within
the defined 190-dB shutdown zone.
After correcting for animal location
based on distance and bearing relative
to the observer, the distance from the
animal to the pile was determined to be
approximately 30 m. The barge location
on that day may have impacted the
observer’s ability to judge distance
relative to the pile. Although the sea
lion was sighted relatively close to the
shutdown zone, the MMO assumed that,
since it was seen passing the 49 × 12 m
barge, it was outside of the shutdown
zone. The animal continued swimming
and no behavioral changes were noted.
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53039
TABLE 5—MARINE MAMMAL MONITORING RESULTS
Species
Location
California sea lion ..................................
NMAWC ................................................
IPP .........................................................
NMAWC ................................................
IPP .........................................................
NMAWC ................................................
IPP .........................................................
IPP .........................................................
IPP .........................................................
Harbor seal ............................................
Bottlenose dolphin .................................
Gray whale 1 ...........................................
Common dolphin 2 ..................................
Total sightings
Total individuals
24
1,061
6
23
1
34
1
3
25
2,299
6
25
1
83
1
19
Total incidents of
Level B take
1
387
1
6
0
13
0
0
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1 One large cetacean was observed just to the east of the Zuniga Jetty. It could not be positively identified but was likely a gray whale. See
Figure 3–28 of the monitoring report.
2 No take was authorized for common dolphins.
Estimated Take by Incidental
Harassment
Except with respect to certain
activities not pertinent here, section
3(18) of the MMPA defines
‘‘harassment’’ as: ‘‘. . . any act of
pursuit, torment, or annoyance which (i)
has the potential to injure a marine
mammal or marine mammal stock in the
wild [Level A harassment]; or (ii) has
the potential to disturb a marine
mammal or marine mammal stock in the
wild by causing disruption of behavioral
patterns, including, but not limited to,
migration, breathing, nursing, breeding,
feeding, or sheltering [Level B
harassment].’’
All anticipated takes would be by
Level B harassment resulting from
vibratory and impact pile driving or
pneumatic chipping and involving
temporary changes in behavior. The
proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures are expected to minimize the
possibility of injurious or lethal takes
such that take by Level A harassment,
serious injury, or mortality is
considered discountable. However, it is
unlikely that injurious or lethal takes
would occur even in the absence of the
planned mitigation and monitoring
measures.
If a marine mammal responds to a
stimulus by changing its behavior (e.g.,
through relatively minor changes in
locomotion direction/speed or
vocalization behavior), the response
may or may not constitute taking at the
individual level, and is unlikely to
affect the stock or the species as a
whole. However, if a sound source
displaces marine mammals from an
important feeding or breeding area for a
prolonged period, impacts on animals or
on the stock or species could potentially
be significant (e.g., Lusseau and Bejder,
2007; Weilgart, 2007). Given the many
uncertainties in predicting the quantity
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and types of impacts of sound on
marine mammals, it is common practice
to estimate how many animals are likely
to be present within a particular
distance of a given activity, or exposed
to a particular level of sound. This
practice potentially overestimates the
numbers of marine mammals taken. In
addition, it is often difficult to
distinguish between the individuals
harassed and incidences of harassment.
In particular, for stationary activities, it
is more likely that some smaller number
of individuals may accrue a number of
incidences of harassment per individual
than for each incidence to accrue to a
new individual, especially if those
individuals display some degree of
residency or site fidelity and the
impetus to use the site (e.g., because of
foraging opportunities) is stronger than
the deterrence presented by the
harassing activity.
The project area is not believed to be
particularly important habitat for
marine mammals, nor is it considered
an area frequented by marine mammals
(with the exception of California sea
lions, which are attracted to nearby
haul-out opportunities). Sightings of
other species are relatively rare.
Therefore, behavioral disturbances that
could result from anthropogenic sound
associated with these activities are
expected to affect only a relatively small
number of individual marine mammals,
although those effects could be
recurring over the life of the project if
the same individuals remain in the
project vicinity.
The Navy has requested authorization
for the potential taking of small
numbers of California sea lions, harbor
seals, bottlenose dolphins, common
dolphins, and gray whales in San Diego
Bay and nearby waters that may result
from pile driving during construction
activities associated with the fuel pier
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replacement project described
previously in this document. In order to
estimate the potential incidents of take
that may occur incidental to the
specified activity, we typically first
estimate the extent of the sound field
that may be produced by the activity
and then consider in combination with
information about marine mammal
density or abundance in the project
area. In this case, we have acoustic data
from project monitoring that provides
empirical information regarding the
sound fields likely produced by project
activities. We first provide information
on applicable sound thresholds for
determining effects to marine mammals
before describing the measured sound
fields, the available marine mammal
density or abundance information, and
the method of estimating potential
incidents of take.
Sound Thresholds
We use generic sound exposure
thresholds to determine when an
activity that produces sound might
result in impacts to a marine mammal
such that a take by harassment might
occur. To date, no studies have been
conducted that explicitly examine
impacts to marine mammals from pile
driving sounds or from which empirical
sound thresholds have been established.
These thresholds (Table 6) are used to
estimate when harassment may occur
(i.e., when an animal is exposed to
levels equal to or exceeding the relevant
criterion) in specific contexts; however,
useful contextual information that may
inform our assessment of effects is
typically lacking and we consider these
thresholds as step functions. NMFS is
working to revise these acoustic
guidelines; for more information on that
process, please visit
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/acoustics/
guidelines.htm.
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TABLE 6—CURRENT ACOUSTIC EXPOSURE CRITERIA
Criterion
Definition
Level A harassment (underwater) ...
Injury (PTS—any level above that
which is known to cause TTS).
Behavioral disruption .....................
Behavioral disruption .....................
Level B harassment (underwater) ...
Level B harassment (airborne) .......
Distance to Sound Thresholds
Background information on
underwater sound propagation and the
calculation of range to relevant
thresholds was provided in our Federal
Register notice of proposed
authorization associated with the firstyear IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013).
For the first-year IHA, the Navy
estimated sound fields using a sitespecific model for transmission loss
(TL) from pile driving at a central point
at the project site in combination with
proxy source levels (as described in the
aforementioned Federal Register
notice). The model is based on historical
temperature-salinity data and locationdependent bathymetry. In the model, TL
is the same for different sound source
levels and is applied to each of the
different activities to determine the
point at which the applicable thresholds
are reached as a function of distance
from the source. The model’s
Threshold
180 dB (cetaceans)/190 dB (pinnipeds) (rms).
160 dB (impulsive source)/120 dB (continuous source) (rms).
90 dB (harbor seals)/100 dB (other pinnipeds) (unweighted).
predictions result in a slightly lower
average rate of TL than practical
spreading, and hence are conservative.
The model has been further validated
using acoustic monitoring data collected
under the first-year IHA (see Figure 6–
1 of the Navy’s application).
Only impact and vibratory driving of
steel pipe piles is planned for the next
phase of work. Demolition activities,
including vibratory pile removal and
pneumatic chipping, are also planned
but would always occur concurrently
with impact and vibratory driving and
the resulting sound fields would be
subsumed by those activities. Acoustic
monitoring results that inform both the
take estimates as well as the mitigation
monitoring zones were reported in
Table 4. We present the measured
distances again here (Table 7) and
compare to the modeled zones used in
estimating potential incidents of take for
the first year IHA. See also Figure 6–2
of the Navy’s application for visual
representation of these sound fields and
their interaction with local topography.
Assumed proxy source levels for the
first-year IHA were 195 dB rms and 180
dB rms for impact and vibratory driving
of steel piles, respectively. Measured
source levels, used to produce the
values labeled as ‘‘measured’’ below,
were 200 dB rms and 170 dB rms for
impact and vibratory driving,
respectively. For impact driving,
distances to the 160/180/190-dB ZOIs
are 5,484, 452, and 36 m. For vibratory
driving, background sound has been
determined to be approximately 128 dB
rms. The distance at which continuous
sound produced by vibratory driving
would attenuate to background levels is
approximately 3,000 m. For airborne
sound, we assume a single,
precautionary zone here that is based on
measured values for impact driving
(approximately 110 dB [unweighted]).
TABLE 7—PREDICTED VERSUS MEASURED DISTANCES TO RELEVANT THRESHOLDS
Distance to threshold in meters
Activity
190 dB
Impact driving, steel piles (predicted) ..............................
Impact driving, steel piles (measured) 1 ..........................
Vibratory driving, steel piles (predicted) ..........................
Vibratory driving, steel piles (measured) .........................
1 Note
160 dB
452
450
14
<10
120 dB
5,484
2,500
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
6,470
3,000
100 dB
113
71
9
n/a
90 dB
358
233
28
n/a
that these values are based on data for bayside piles and will be precautionary for shoreside piles. See discussion at Table 4.
Airborne Sound
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36
75
<10
<10
180 dB
Although sea lions are known to haulout regularly on man-made objects in
the vicinity of the project site (see
Figure 4–1 of the Navy’s application),
and harbor seals are occasionally
observed hauled out on rocks along the
shoreline in the vicinity of the project
site, none of these are within the ZOIs
for airborne sound, and we believe that
incidents of incidental take resulting
solely from airborne sound are unlikely.
The zones for sea lions are within the
minimum shutdown zone defined for
underwater sound and, although the
zones for harbor seals are larger, they
have not been observed to haul out as
readily on man-made structure in the
immediate vicinity of the project site.
There is a remote possibility that an
animal could surface in-water, but with
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head out, within one of the defined
zones and thereby be exposed to levels
of airborne sound that we associate with
harassment, but any such occurrence
would likely be accounted for in our
estimation of incidental take from
underwater sound.
In summary, we generally recognize
that pinnipeds occurring within an
estimated airborne harassment zone,
whether in the water or hauled out,
could be exposed to airborne sound that
may result in behavioral harassment.
However, any animal exposed to
airborne sound above the behavioral
harassment threshold is likely to also be
exposed to underwater sound above
relevant thresholds (which are typically
in all cases larger zones than those
associated with airborne sound). Thus,
the behavioral harassment of these
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animals is already accounted for in
these estimates of potential take.
Multiple incidents of exposure to sound
above NMFS’ thresholds for behavioral
harassment are not believed to result in
increased behavioral disturbance, in
either nature or intensity of disturbance
reaction. Therefore, we do not believe
that authorization of incidental take
resulting from airborne sound for
pinnipeds is warranted, and airborne
sound is not discussed further here.
Marine Mammal Densities
For all species, the best scientific
information available was considered
for use in the marine mammal take
assessment calculations. Although
various regional offshore surveys for
marine mammals have been conducted,
it is unlikely that these data would be
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representative of the species or numbers
that may be encountered in San Diego
Bay. However, the Navy has conducted
a large number of site-specific marine
mammal surveys, from 2007–14 (Merkel
and Associates, 2008; Johnson, 2010,
2011; Lerma, 2012, 2014). Whereas
analyses for the previous IHA relied on
surveys conducted from 2007–12,
continuing surveys by the Navy have
generally indicated increasing
abundance of all species. Accordingly,
we use here data from surveys of the
project area that were conducted
between September 2012 and April
2014 in order to provide the most upto-date estimates for marine mammal
abundances during the period of this
proposed IHA. These data are from
dedicated line-transect surveys, or from
opportunistic observations for more
rarely observed species (see Figures 3–
1 and 3–2 of the Navy’s application).
Boat survey transects established within
northern San Diego Bay in 2007 have
been resurveyed on 46 occasions, 35 of
which were conducted between
September and April. Observational
data from the most recent 22 of these
surveys inform this analysis.
In addition, the Navy has developed
estimates of marine mammal densities
in waters associated with training and
testing areas (including HawaiiSouthern California) for the Navy
Marine Species Density Database
(NMSDD). A technical report (Hanser et
al., 2014) describes methodologies and
available information used to derive
these densities, which are based upon
the best available information, except
where specific local abundance
information is available and applicable
to a specific action area. Density
information is shown in Table 8; the
document is publicly available on the
Internet at: nwtteis.com/
DocumentsandReferences/
NWTTDocuments/
SupportingTechnicalDocuments.aspx
(accessed August 26, 2014).
Description of Take Calculation
The following assumptions are made
when estimating potential incidences of
take:
• All marine mammal individuals
potentially available are assumed to be
present within the relevant area, and
thus incidentally taken;
• An individual can only be taken
once during a 24-h period;
• There were will be 135 total days of
activity;
• The maximum ZOI is
approximately 5.7 km2;
• Vibratory and impact driving of
steel pipe piles will occur on each day;
and,
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• Exposures to sound levels at or
above the relevant thresholds equate to
take, as defined by the MMPA.
The estimation of marine mammal
takes typically uses the following
calculation:
Exposure estimate = (n * ZOI) * days of
total activity
where:
n = density estimate used for each species/
season
ZOI = sound threshold ZOI area; the area
encompassed by all locations where the
SPLs equal or exceed the threshold being
evaluated
n * ZOI produces an estimate of the
abundance of animals that could be
present in the area for exposure, and is
rounded to the nearest whole number
before multiplying by days of total
activity.
The ZOI impact area is estimated
using the relevant distances in Table 7,
assuming that sound radiates from a
central point in the water column
slightly offshore of the existing pier and
taking into consideration the possible
affected area due to topographical
constraints of the action area (i.e., radial
distances to thresholds are not always
reached). When local abundance is the
best available information, in lieu of the
density-area method described above,
we may simply multiply some number
of animals (as determined through
counts of animals hauled-out) by the
number of days of activity, under the
assumption that all of those animals
will be present and incidentally taken
on each day of activity.
Where appropriate, we use average
daily number of individuals observed
within the project area (defined as the
120-dB ZOI for potential behavioral
disturbance by vibratory pile driving
calculated without consideration for
background sound levels) during Navy
marine mammal surveys, corrected to
allow for a five percent contingency. It
is the opinion of the professional
biologists who conducted these surveys
that detectability of animals during
these surveys, at slow speeds and under
calm weather and excellent viewing
conditions, approached one hundred
percent. However, to account for the
possibility that some parts of the study
area may not have been covered due to
access limitations, and to allow for
variation in the accuracy of counts of
large numbers of animals, a 95 percent
detection rate is assumed (equivalent to
five percent precautionary contingency
allowance).
There are a number of reasons why
estimates of potential incidents of take
may be conservative, assuming that
available density or abundance
estimates and estimated ZOI areas are
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53041
accurate (aside from the contingency
correction discussed above). We
assume, in the absence of information
supporting a more refined conclusion,
that the output of the calculation
represents the number of individuals
that may be taken by the specified
activity. In fact, in the context of
stationary activities such as pile driving
and in areas where resident animals
may be present, this number more
realistically represents the number of
incidents of take that may accrue to a
smaller number of individuals. While
pile driving can occur any day
throughout the period of validity, and
the analysis is conducted on a per day
basis, only a fraction of that time
(typically a matter of hours on any given
day) is actually spent pile driving. The
potential effectiveness of mitigation
measures in reducing the number of
takes is typically not quantified in the
take estimation process. For these
reasons, these take estimates may be
conservative. See Table 8 for total
estimated incidents of take.
California Sea Lion
The NMSDD reports estimated
densities for north and central San
Diego Bay of 5.8 animals/km2 for the
summer and fall periods and 2.5
animals/km2 during the winter and
spring (based on surveys conducted
2007–11). For the first-year IHA, the
Navy reported an average abundance of
approximately sixty individuals per
survey day (approximately equating to
the reported density). However, when
considering only more recent Navy
vessel-based surveys (22 surveys
between September 2012 and April
2014), an average of 175 individuals
(adjusted for 95 percent detection as
described above) has been observed
within the maximum ZOI for the project
during the seasonal period of in-water
construction. This includes both
hauled-out and swimming individuals.
For California sea lions, the most
common species in northern San Diego
Bay and the only species with regular
occurrence in the project area, we
determined that this value—derived
from more recent site-specific surveys—
would be most appropriate for use in
estimating potential incidences of take.
Harbor Seal
Harbor seals are relatively uncommon
within San Diego Bay. Previously,
sightings in the Navy transect surveys of
northern San Diego Bay were limited to
individuals outside of the ZOI, on the
south side of Ballast Point. These
individuals had not been observed
entering or transiting the project area
and were believed to move from this
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location to haul-outs further north at La
Jolla. Separately, marine mammal
monitoring conducted by the Navy
intermittently from 2010–14 had
documented up to four harbor seals near
Pier 122 (within the ZOI) at various
times, with the greatest number of
sightings during April and May. This
information was used in the previous
IHA analysis, wherein we assumed that
three harbor seals could be present for
up to thirty days of the project.
However, more recent data from Navy
transect surveys (September 2012
through April 2014) indicate an average
abundance of 6.17 within the maximum
project ZOI (adjusted for 95 percent
detection to an average of seven
individuals). Animals were seen
swimming as well as hauled out on
rocks along the shoreline of NBPL.
Although it is unknown whether this
increase in abundance is a temporary
phenomenon we use this new
information on a precautionary basis as
the best available information, and
assume that this number of animals
could be present on any day of the
project. The NMSDD provides a
maximum density estimate of 0.02
animals/km2 for southern California, but
recent, site-specific information
indicates that harbor seals are more
common within the northern San Diego
Bay project area than this density would
suggest.
Gray Whale
The NMSDD provides a density of 0.1
animals/km2 for southern California
waters from shore to 5 nm west of the
Channel Islands (winter/spring only;
density assumed to be zero during
summer/fall), a value initially reported
by Carretta et al. (2000) for gray whales
around San Clemente Island in the
Southern California Bight. Gray whales
were seen only from January-April. In
the project area, observational data for
gray whales is limited and their
occurrence considered infrequent and
unpredictable. On the basis of limited
information—in recent years, solitary
individuals have entered the bay and
remained for varying lengths of time in
2009, 2010, 2011, and 2014, and whales
more regularly transit briefly past the
mouth of San Diego Bay—we assume
here that the NMSDD density may be
applicable throughout the migration
period (December–April), while
acknowledging that it likely represents
a precautionary estimate for waters
within the Bay as opposed to those
outside the mouth of the bay that
whales are more likely to transit
through. In order to determine how
many of the maximum 135 days of inwater pile driving work it is appropriate
to assume the potential for gray whale
presence, we consider in-water work
days (five days per week) that overlap
the main part of the migration season
(approximately eighteen weeks), for a
total of ninety days. Incidental
harassment of gray whales could result
from some combination of individuals
briefly transiting near the mouth of the
Bay and from individuals entering the
bay and lingering in the project area.
Bottlenose Dolphin
Coastal bottlenose dolphins can occur
at any time of year in San Diego Bay.
Numbers sighted during Navy transect
surveys have been highly variable,
ranging from zero to forty individuals
(observed dolphins are assumed to have
been of the coastal stock). An
uncorrected average of 2.1 bottlenose
dolphins was observed during recent
Navy surveys (September 2012 through
April 2014), although nineteen animals
were observed in a single survey. As
reported in the NMSDD, Dudzik et al.
(2006) provide a uniform density for
California coastal dolphins of 0.4
animals/km2 within 1 km of the coast
from Baja to San Francisco in all four
seasons. However, given the sporadic
nature of bottlenose dolphin sightings
(i.e., limited data) and the high
variability observed in terms of numbers
and locations, we believe it appropriate
to take a precautionary approach to take
estimation for bottlenose dolphins and
assume that as many as three dolphins
could occur per day of activity. We
believe that this increase from the
observed abundance is necessary and
sufficient to account for the uncertainty
described above.
Common Dolphin
Common dolphins are present in the
coastal waters outside of San Diego Bay,
but have been observed in the bay only
infrequently and were never seen during
the Navy’s surveys. However, the
previously described observations of
common dolphins in the project area
during the IPP in 2014 prompted their
inclusion in this proposed IHA. There
have not been enough sightings of
common dolphins in San Diego Bay to
develop a reliable estimate specific to
the project area. Sightings of longbeaked common dolphins are
predominantly near shore, and have
been documented during Navy training
exercises just offshore and to the south
of San Diego Bay, whereas those of
short-beaked common dolphins extend
throughout the coastal and offshore
waters. The NMSDD provides an allseason density estimate of 0.1 animals/
km2 for the long-beaked common
dolphin within southern California
waters (derived from Ferguson and
Barlow [2003] and Barlow and Forney
[2007]). Because short-beaked common
dolphins are less common in nearshore
waters than are long-beaked, and are
expected to be less likely to occur in the
project area, we assign the value for
long-beaked common dolphins to all
common dolphins that may occur in the
project area. However, use of this
density value would result in an
assumption that no common dolphins
would be incidentally taken by project
activities. We believe it appropriate to
take a precautionary approach and, on
the basis of the common dolphin
observations from previous project
monitoring (i.e., three observations with
average group size of six), assume that
a group of six dolphins could
potentially be present on each day of
activity. These incidents of take could
be of either long-beaked or short-beaked
common dolphins.
TABLE 8—CALCULATIONS FOR INCIDENTAL TAKE ESTIMATION
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Total proposed authorized
takes 3 (% of total stock)
Abundance 1
Species
California sea lion ...............................................................................................................
Harbor seal .........................................................................................................................
Bottlenose dolphin ..............................................................................................................
Common dolphin .................................................................................................................
Gray whale ..........................................................................................................................
175
7
3
6
21
23,625 (8.0)
945 (3.1)
405 (81.0) 4
810 (0.8 [LB]/0.2 [SB]) 5
90 (0.5)
1 Best available species- and season-specific density estimate were described above. With the exception of the gray whale (see footnote 2
below), we have determined that in all cases a site-specific abundance estimate is the most appropriate information to use in estimating take.
See discussions above.
2 Product of density (0.115 animals/km2) and largest ZOI (5.7 km2) rounded to nearest whole number.
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53043
3 Best abundance numbers multiplied by expected days of activity (135) to produce take estimate. Calculation for gray whale assumes ninety
days rather than 135; see discussion above.
4 Total stock assumed to be 500 for purposes of calculation. See Table 3.
5 LB = long-beaked; SB = short-beaked.
rmajette on DSK2TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Analyses and Preliminary
Determinations
Negligible Impact Analysis
NMFS has defined ‘‘negligible
impact’’ in 50 CFR 216.103 as ‘‘. . . an
impact resulting from the specified
activity that cannot be reasonably
expected to, and is not reasonably likely
to, adversely affect the species or stock
through effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival.’’ A negligible
impact finding is based on the lack of
likely adverse effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival (i.e., populationlevel effects). An estimate of the number
of Level B harassment takes alone is not
enough information on which to base an
impact determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of
marine mammals that might be ‘‘taken’’
through behavioral harassment, we
consider other factors, such as the likely
nature of any responses (e.g., intensity,
duration), the context of any responses
(e.g., critical reproductive time or
location, migration), as well as the
number and nature of estimated Level A
harassment takes, the number of
estimated mortalities, and effects on
habitat.
Pile driving activities associated with
the pier replacement project, as outlined
previously, have the potential to disturb
or displace marine mammals.
Specifically, the specified activities may
result in take, in the form of Level B
harassment (behavioral disturbance)
only, from underwater sounds generated
from pile driving. Potential takes could
occur if individuals of these species are
present in the ensonified zone when
pile driving is happening.
No injury, serious injury, or mortality
is anticipated given the nature of the
activity and measures designed to
minimize the possibility of injury to
marine mammals. The potential for
these outcomes is minimized through
the construction method and the
implementation of the planned
mitigation measures. Specifically,
vibratory hammers will be the primary
method of installation, and this activity
does not have significant potential to
cause injury to marine mammals due to
the relatively low source levels
produced (site-specific acoustic
monitoring data show no source level
measurements above 180 dB rms) and
the lack of potentially injurious source
characteristics. Impact pile driving
produces short, sharp pulses with
higher peak levels and much sharper
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rise time to reach those peaks. When
impact driving is necessary, required
measures (implementation of shutdown
zones) significantly reduce any
possibility of injury. Given sufficient
‘‘notice’’ through use of soft start (for
impact driving), marine mammals are
expected to move away from a sound
source that is annoying prior to its
becoming potentially injurious. The
likelihood that marine mammal
detection ability by trained observers is
high under the environmental
conditions described for San Diego Bay
(approaching one hundred percent
detection rate, as described by trained
biologists conducting site-specific
surveys) further enables the
implementation of shutdowns to avoid
injury, serious injury, or mortality.
Effects on individuals that are taken
by Level B harassment, on the basis of
reports in the literature as well as
monitoring from other similar activities,
will likely be limited to reactions such
as increased swimming speeds,
increased surfacing time, or decreased
foraging (if such activity were occurring)
(e.g., Thorson and Reyff, 2006; HDR,
2012; Lerma, 2014). Most likely,
individuals will simply move away
from the sound source and be
temporarily displaced from the areas of
pile driving, although even this reaction
has been observed primarily only in
association with impact pile driving. In
response to vibratory driving, pinnipeds
(which may become somewhat
habituated to human activity in
industrial or urban waterways) have
been observed to orient towards and
sometimes move towards the sound.
The pile driving activities analyzed here
are similar to, or less impactful than,
numerous other construction activities
conducted in San Francisco Bay and in
the Puget Sound region, which have
taken place with no reported injuries or
mortality to marine mammals, and no
known long-term adverse consequences
from behavioral harassment. Repeated
exposures of individuals to levels of
sound that may cause Level B
harassment are unlikely to result in
hearing impairment or to significantly
disrupt foraging behavior. Thus, even
repeated Level B harassment of some
small subset of the overall stock is
unlikely to result in any significant
realized decrease in fitness for the
affected individuals, and thus would
not result in any adverse impact to the
stock as a whole. Level B harassment
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will be reduced to the level of least
practicable impact through use of
mitigation measures described herein
and, if sound produced by project
activities is sufficiently disturbing,
animals are likely to simply avoid the
project area while the activity is
occurring.
In summary, this negligible impact
analysis is founded on the following
factors: (1) The possibility of injury,
serious injury, or mortality may
reasonably be considered discountable;
(2) the anticipated incidents of Level B
harassment consist of, at worst,
temporary modifications in behavior; (3)
the absence of any significant habitat
within the project area, including
rookeries, significant haul-outs, or
known areas or features of special
significance for foraging or
reproduction; (4) the presumed efficacy
of the proposed mitigation measures in
reducing the effects of the specified
activity to the level of least practicable
impact. In addition, these stocks are not
listed under the ESA or considered
depleted under the MMPA. In
combination, we believe that these
factors, as well as the available body of
evidence from other similar activities,
demonstrate that the potential effects of
the specified activity will have only
short-term effects on individuals. The
specified activity is not expected to
impact rates of recruitment or survival
and will therefore not result in
population-level impacts. Based on the
analysis contained herein of the likely
effects of the specified activity on
marine mammals and their habitat, and
taking into consideration the
implementation of the proposed
monitoring and mitigation measures, we
preliminarily find that the total marine
mammal take from Navy’s pier
replacement activities will have a
negligible impact on the affected marine
mammal species or stocks.
Small Numbers Analysis
The number of incidents of take
proposed for authorization for these
stocks, with the exception of the coastal
bottlenose dolphin (see below), would
be considered small relative to the
relevant stocks or populations (see
Table 8) even if each estimated taking
occurred to a new individual. This is an
extremely unlikely scenario as, for
pinnipeds occurring at the NBPL
waterfront, there will almost certainly
be some overlap in individuals present
day-to-day and in general, there is likely
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to be some overlap in individuals
present day-to-day for animals in
estuarine/inland waters.
The proposed numbers of authorized
take for bottlenose dolphins are higher
relative to the total stock abundance
estimate and would not represent small
numbers if a significant portion of the
take was for a new individual. However,
these numbers represent the estimated
incidents of take, not the number of
individuals taken. That is, it is likely
that a relatively small subset of
California coastal bottlenose dolphins
would be incidentally harassed by
project activities. California coastal
bottlenose dolphins range from San
Francisco Bay to San Diego (and south
into Mexico) and the specified activity
would be stationary within an enclosed
water body that is not recognized as an
area of any special significance for
coastal bottlenose dolphins (and is
therefore not an area of dolphin
aggregation, as evident in Navy
observational records). We therefore
believe that the estimated numbers of
takes, were they to occur, likely
represent repeated exposures of a much
smaller number of bottlenose dolphins
and that, based on the limited region of
exposure in comparison with the known
distribution of the coastal bottlenose
dolphin, these estimated incidents of
take represent small numbers of
bottlenose dolphins.
Based on the analysis contained
herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals
and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the
mitigation and monitoring measures, we
preliminarily find that small numbers of
marine mammals will be taken relative
to the populations of the affected
species or stocks.
rmajette on DSK2TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Impact on Availability of Affected
Species for Taking for Subsistence Uses
There are no relevant subsistence uses
of marine mammals implicated by this
action. Therefore, we have determined
that the total taking of affected species
or stocks would not have an unmitigable
adverse impact on the availability of
such species or stocks for taking for
subsistence purposes.
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
The Navy initiated informal
consultation under section 7 of the ESA
with NMFS Southwest Regional Office
(now West Coast Regional Office) on
March 5, 2013. NMFS concluded on
May 16, 2013, that the proposed action
may affect, but is not likely to adversely
affect, WNP gray whales. The Navy has
not requested authorization of the
incidental take of WNP gray whales and
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no such authorization is proposed, and
there are no other ESA-listed marine
mammals found in the action area.
Therefore, no consultation under the
ESA is required.
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
In compliance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), as implemented by
the regulations published by the
Council on Environmental Quality (40
CFR parts 1500–1508), the Navy
prepared an Environmental Assessment
(EA) to consider the direct, indirect and
cumulative effects to the human
environment resulting from the pier
replacement project. NMFS made the
Navy’s EA available to the public for
review and comment, in relation to its
suitability for adoption by NMFS in
order to assess the impacts to the human
environment of issuance of an IHA to
the Navy. Also in compliance with
NEPA and the CEQ regulations, as well
as NOAA Administrative Order 216–6,
NMFS has reviewed the Navy’s EA,
determined it to be sufficient, and
adopted that EA and signed a Finding
of No Significant Impact (FONSI) on
July 8, 2013.
We have reviewed the Navy’s
application for a renewed IHA for
ongoing construction activities for
2014–15 and the 2013–14 monitoring
report. Based on that review, we have
determined that the proposed action is
very similar to that considered in the
previous IHA. In addition, no significant
new circumstances or information
relevant to environmental concerns
have been identified. Thus, we have
determined preliminarily that the
preparation of a new or supplemental
NEPA document is not necessary, and
will, after review of public comments
determine whether or not to reaffirm our
2013 FONSI. The 2013 NEPA
documents are available for review at
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/
incidental.htm.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary
determinations, we propose to issue an
IHA to the Navy for conducting the
described pier replacement activities in
San Diego Bay, for a period of one year
from the date of issuance, provided the
previously mentioned mitigation,
monitoring, and reporting requirements
are incorporated. The proposed IHA
language is provided next.
This section contains a draft of the
IHA itself. The wording contained in
this section is proposed for inclusion in
the IHA (if issued).
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1. This Incidental Harassment
Authorization (IHA) is valid for a period
of one year from the date of issuance.
2. This IHA is valid only for pile
driving and removal activities
associated with the fuel pier
replacement project in San Diego Bay,
California.
3. General Conditions
(a) A copy of this IHA must be in the
possession of the Navy, its designees,
and work crew personnel operating
under the authority of this IHA.
(b) The species authorized for taking
are the harbor seal (Phoca vitulina
richardii), California sea lion (Zalophus
californianus), bottlenose dolphin
(Tursiops truncatus truncatus), common
dolphin (Delphinus sp.), and gray whale
(Eschrichtius robustus).
(c) The taking, by Level B harassment
only, is limited to the species listed in
condition 3(b). See Table 1 (attached)
for numbers of take authorized.
(d) The taking by injury (Level A
harassment), serious injury, or death of
any of the species listed in condition
3(b) of the Authorization or any taking
of any other species of marine mammal
is prohibited and may result in the
modification, suspension, or revocation
of this IHA.
(e) The Navy shall conduct briefings
between construction supervisors and
crews, marine mammal monitoring
team, acoustic monitoring team, and
Navy staff prior to the start of all pile
driving activity, and when new
personnel join the work, in order to
explain responsibilities, communication
procedures, marine mammal monitoring
protocol, and operational procedures.
4. Mitigation Measures
The holder of this Authorization is
required to implement the following
mitigation measures:
(a) For all pile driving, the Navy shall
implement a minimum shutdown zone
of 10 m radius around the pile. If a
marine mammal comes within or
approaches the shutdown zone, such
operations shall cease. See Table 2
(attached) for minimum radial distances
required for shutdown zones.
(b) The Navy shall similarly avoid
direct interaction with marine mammals
during in-water heavy machinery work
other than pile driving that may occur
in association with the specified
activities. If a marine mammal comes
within 10 m of such activity, operations
shall cease and vessels shall reduce
speed to the minimum level required to
maintain steerage and safe working
conditions, as appropriate.
(c) The Navy shall establish
monitoring locations as described
below. Please also refer to the Acoustic
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and Marine Species Monitoring Plan
(Monitoring Plan; attached).
i. For all pile driving activities, a
minimum of one observer shall be
stationed at the active pile driving rig in
order to monitor the shutdown zones.
ii. For all pile driving activities, at
least three additional vessel-based
observers shall be positioned for
optimal monitoring of the surrounding
waters. During impact driving of steel
piles, one of these shall be stationed for
optimal monitoring of the cetacean
Level A injury zone (see Table 2), while
two of these may be positioned at the
discretion of the Navy for optimal
fulfillment of both acoustic monitoring
objectives and monitoring of the Level
B harassment zone. During all other pile
driving, all three vessel-based observers
may be positioned at the discretion of
the Navy for optimal fulfillment of both
acoustic monitoring objectives and
monitoring of the Level B harassment
zone.
iii. For all impact pile driving
activities, a minimum of one shorebased observer shall be located at the
pier work site.
iv. These observers shall record all
observations of marine mammals,
regardless of distance from the pile
being driven, as well as behavior and
potential behavioral reactions of the
animals. Photographs must be taken of
any observed gray whales.
v. All observers shall be equipped for
communication of marine mammal
observations amongst themselves and to
other relevant personnel (e.g., those
necessary to effect activity delay or
shutdown).
(d) Monitoring shall take place from
fifteen minutes prior to initiation of pile
driving activity through thirty minutes
post-completion of pile driving activity.
Pre-activity monitoring shall be
conducted for fifteen minutes to ensure
that the shutdown zone is clear of
marine mammals, and pile driving may
commence when observers have
declared the shutdown zone clear of
marine mammals. In the event of a delay
or shutdown of activity resulting from
marine mammals in the shutdown zone,
animals shall be allowed to remain in
the shutdown zone (i.e., must leave of
their own volition) and their behavior
shall be monitored and documented.
Monitoring shall occur throughout the
time required to drive a pile. The
shutdown zone must be determined to
be clear during periods of good visibility
(i.e., the entire shutdown zone and
surrounding waters must be visible to
the naked eye).
(e) If a marine mammal approaches or
enters the shutdown zone, all pile
driving activities at that location shall
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be halted. If pile driving is halted or
delayed due to the presence of a marine
mammal, the activity may not
commence or resume until either the
animal has voluntarily left and been
visually confirmed beyond the
shutdown zone or fifteen minutes have
passed without re-detection of the
animal.
(f) Monitoring shall be conducted by
qualified observers, as described in the
Monitoring Plan. Trained observers
shall be placed from the best vantage
point(s) practicable to monitor for
marine mammals and implement
shutdown or delay procedures when
applicable through communication with
the equipment operator.
(g) The Navy shall use soft start
techniques recommended by NMFS for
vibratory and impact pile driving. Soft
start for vibratory drivers requires
contractors to initiate sound for fifteen
seconds at reduced energy followed by
a thirty-second waiting period. This
procedure is repeated two additional
times. Soft start for impact drivers
requires contractors to provide an initial
set of strikes at reduced energy,
followed by a thirty-second waiting
period, then two subsequent reduced
energy strike sets. Soft start shall be
implemented at the start of each day’s
pile driving and at any time following
cessation of pile driving for a period of
thirty minutes or longer. Soft start for
impact drivers must be implemented at
any time following cessation of impact
driving for a period of thirty minutes or
longer.
(h) Pile driving shall only be
conducted during daylight hours.
5. Monitoring
The holder of this Authorization is
required to conduct marine mammal
monitoring during pile driving activity.
Marine mammal monitoring and
reporting shall be conducted in
accordance with the Monitoring Plan.
(a) The Navy shall collect sighting
data and behavioral responses to pile
driving for marine mammal species
observed in the region of activity during
the period of activity. All observers
shall be trained in marine mammal
identification and behaviors, and shall
have no other construction-related tasks
while conducting monitoring.
(b) For all marine mammal
monitoring, the information shall be
recorded as described in the Monitoring
Plan.
(c) The Navy shall conduct acoustic
monitoring for representative scenarios
of pile driving activity, as described in
the Monitoring Plan.
6. Reporting
The holder of this Authorization is
required to:
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53045
(a) Submit a draft report on all
monitoring conducted under the IHA
within 45 calendar days of the
completion of marine mammal and
acoustic monitoring, or sixty days prior
to the issuance of any subsequent IHA
for this project, whichever comes first.
A final report shall be prepared and
submitted within thirty days following
resolution of comments on the draft
report from NMFS. This report must
contain the informational elements
described in the Monitoring Plan, at
minimum (see attached), and shall also
include:
i. Detailed information about any
implementation of shutdowns,
including the distance of animals to the
pile and description of specific actions
that ensued and resulting behavior of
the animal, if any.
ii. Description of attempts to
distinguish between the number of
individual animals taken and the
number of incidences of take, such as
ability to track groups or individuals.
iii. Results of acoustic monitoring,
including the information described in
the Monitoring Plan.
(b) Reporting injured or dead marine
mammals:
i. In the unanticipated event that the
specified activity clearly causes the take
of a marine mammal in a manner
prohibited by this IHA, such as an
injury (Level A harassment), serious
injury, or mortality, Navy shall
immediately cease the specified
activities and report the incident to the
Office of Protected Resources (301–427–
8425), NMFS, and the West Coast
Regional Stranding Coordinator (206–
526–6550), NMFS. The report must
include the following information:
A. Time and date of the incident;
B. Description of the incident;
C. Environmental conditions (e.g.,
wind speed and direction, Beaufort sea
state, cloud cover, and visibility);
D. Description of all marine mammal
observations in the 24 hours preceding
the incident;
E. Species identification or
description of the animal(s) involved;
F. Fate of the animal(s); and
G. Photographs or video footage of the
animal(s).
Activities shall not resume until
NMFS is able to review the
circumstances of the prohibited take.
NMFS will work with Navy to
determine what measures are necessary
to minimize the likelihood of further
prohibited take and ensure MMPA
compliance. Navy may not resume their
activities until notified by NMFS.
i. In the event that Navy discovers an
injured or dead marine mammal, and
the lead observer determines that the
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cause of the injury or death is unknown
and the death is relatively recent (e.g.,
in less than a moderate state of
decomposition), Navy shall immediately
report the incident to the Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, and the
West Coast Regional Stranding
Coordinator, NMFS.
The report must include the same
information identified in 6(b)(i) of this
IHA. Activities may continue while
NMFS reviews the circumstances of the
incident. NMFS will work with Navy to
determine whether additional
mitigation measures or modifications to
the activities are appropriate.
ii. In the event that Navy discovers an
injured or dead marine mammal, and
the lead observer determines that the
injury or death is not associated with or
related to the activities authorized in the
IHA (e.g., previously wounded animal,
carcass with moderate to advanced
decomposition, scavenger damage),
Navy shall report the incident to the
Office of Protected Resources, NMFS,
and the West Coast Regional Stranding
Coordinator, NMFS, within 24 hours of
the discovery. Navy shall provide
photographs or video footage or other
documentation of the stranded animal
sighting to NMFS.
7. This Authorization may be
modified, suspended or withdrawn if
the holder fails to abide by the
conditions prescribed herein, or if the
authorized taking is having more than a
negligible impact on the species or stock
of affected marine mammals.
Request for Public Comments
We request comment on our analysis,
the draft authorization, and any other
aspect of this Notice of Proposed IHA
for Navy’s pier replacement activities.
Please include with your comments any
supporting data or literature citations to
help inform our final decision on Navy’s
request for an MMPA authorization.
Dated: August 29, 2014.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2014–21140 Filed 9–4–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
rmajette on DSK2TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
Consumer Advisory Board Meeting
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
AGENCY:
This notice sets forth the
announcement of a public meeting of
the Consumer Advisory Board (CAB or
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
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Board) of the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau (Bureau). The notice
also describes the functions of the
Board. Notice of the meeting is
permitted by section 6 of the CAB
Charter and is intended to notify the
public of this meeting. Specifically,
Section X of the CAB Charter states:
(1) Each meeting of the Board shall be
open to public observation, to the extent
that a facility is available to
accommodate the public, unless the
Bureau, in accordance with paragraph
(4) of this section, determines that the
meeting shall be closed. The Bureau
also will make reasonable efforts to
make the meetings available to the
public through live Web streaming. (2)
Notice of the time, place and purpose of
each meeting, as well as a summary of
the proposed agenda, shall be published
in the Federal Register not more than 45
or less than 15 days prior to the
scheduled meeting date. Shorter notice
may be given when the Bureau
determines that the Board’s business so
requires; in such event, the public will
be given notice at the earliest
practicable time. (3) Minutes of
meetings, records, reports, studies, and
agenda of the Board shall be posted on
the Bureau’s Web site
(www.consumerfinance.gov). (4) The
Bureau may close to the public a portion
of any meeting, for confidential
discussion. If the Bureau closes a
meeting or any portion of a meeting, the
Bureau will issue, at least annually, a
summary of the Board’s activities during
such closed meetings or portions of
meetings.
DATES: The meeting date is Thursday,
September 11, 2014, 10:30 a.m. to 3:45
p.m. Eastern Standard Time.
ADDRESSES: The meeting location is
Gallaudet University, Elstad
Auditorium, 800 Florida Avenue,
Washington, DC 20002.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tracey Wilkerson, Consumer Advisory
Board & Councils, External Affairs, 1700
G Street NW., Washington, DC 20552;
telephone: 202–435–7216; CAB@
CFPB.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 1014(a) of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (https://www.sec.gov/
about/laws/wallstreetreform-cpa.pdf)
(Dodd-Frank Act) provides: ‘‘The
Director shall establish a Consumer
Advisory Board to advise and consult
with the Bureau in the exercise of its
functions under the Federal consumer
financial laws, and to provide
information on emerging practices in
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the consumer financial products or
services industry, including regional
trends, concerns, and other relevant
information.’’ 12 U.S.C. 5494.
(a) The purpose of the Board is
outlined in Section 1014(a) of the DoddFrank Act (https://www.sec.gov/about/
laws/wallstreetreform-cpa.pdf), which
states that the Board shall ‘‘advise and
consult with the Bureau in the exercise
of its functions under the Federal
consumer financial laws’’ and ‘‘provide
information on emerging practices in
the consumer financial products or
services industry, including regional
trends, concerns, and other relevant
information.’’ (b) To carry out the
Board’s purpose, the scope of its
activities shall include providing
information, analysis, and
recommendations to the Bureau. The
Board will generally serve as a vehicle
for market intelligence and expertise for
the Bureau. Its objectives will include
identifying and assessing the impact on
consumers and other market
participants of new, emerging, and
changing products, practices, or
services. (c) The Board will also be
available to advise and consult with the
Director and the Bureau on other
matters related to the Bureau’s functions
under the Dodd-Frank Act.
II. Agenda
The Consumer Advisory Board will
discuss trends and themes related to
technology and access to financial
services.
Persons who need a reasonable
accommodation to participate should
contact CFPB_504Request@cfpb.gov,
202–435–9EEO, 1–855–233–0362, or
202–435–9742 (TTY) at least ten
business days prior to the meeting or
event to request assistance. The request
must identify the date, time, location,
and title of the meeting or event, the
nature of the assistance requested, and
contact information for the requester.
CFPB will strive to provide, but cannot
guarantee that accommodation will be
provided for late requests.
Individuals who wish to attend the
Consumer Advisory Board meeting must
RSVP to cfpb_cabandcouncilsevents@
cfpb.gov by noon, Tuesday, September
9, 2014. Members of the public must
RSVP by the due date and must include
‘‘CAB’’ in the subject line of the RSVP.
III. Availability
The Board’s agenda will be made
available to the public on Wednesday,
September 3, 2014, via
consumerfinance.gov. Individuals
should express in their RSVP if they
require a paper copy of the agenda.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 172 (Friday, September 5, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 53026-53046]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-21140]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XD445
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities;
Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to a Pier Replacement Project
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental harassment authorization; request
for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS has received a request from the U.S. Navy (Navy) for
authorization to take marine mammals incidental to construction
activities as part of a pier replacement project. Pursuant to the
Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is requesting comments on its
proposal to issue an incidental harassment authorization (IHA) to the
Navy to incidentally take marine mammals, by Level B Harassment only,
during the specified activity.
DATES: Comments and information must be received no later than October
6, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Comments on the application should be addressed to Jolie
Harrison, Chief, Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected
Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service. Physical comments should
be sent to 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 and
electronic comments should be sent to ITP.Laws@noaa.gov.
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible for comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or individual, or received after the
end of the comment period. Comments received electronically, including
all attachments, must not exceed a 25-megabyte file size. Attachments
to electronic comments will be accepted in Microsoft Word or Excel or
Adobe PDF file formats only. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted to the Internet at
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm without change. All
personal identifying information (e.g., name, address) 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: Ben Laws, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Availability
An electronic copy of the Navy's application and supporting
documents, as well as a list of the references cited in this document,
may be obtained by visiting the Internet at: www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm. In case of problems accessing these documents,
please call the contact listed above.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
The Navy prepared an Environmental Assessment (EA; 2013) for its
pier replacement project. We subsequently adopted the EA and signed our
own Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) prior to issuing the first
IHA for this project, in accordance with NEPA and the regulations
published by the Council on Environmental Quality. Information in the
Navy's application, the Navy's EA, and this notice collectively provide
the environmental information related to proposed issuance of this IHA
for public review and comment. All documents are available at the
aforementioned Web site. We will review all comments submitted in
response to this notice as we complete the NEPA process, including a
decision of whether to reaffirm the existing FONSI, prior to a final
decision on the incidental take authorization request.
Background
Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.)
direct the Secretary of Commerce to allow, upon request, the
incidental, but not intentional, taking of small numbers of marine
mammals by U.S. citizens who
[[Page 53027]]
engage in a specified activity (other than commercial fishing) within a
specified geographical region if certain findings are made and either
regulations are issued or, if the taking is limited to harassment, a
notice of a proposed authorization is provided to the public for
review.
Authorization for incidental takings shall be granted if NMFS finds
that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species or
stock(s), will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for subsistence uses (where
relevant), and if the permissible methods of taking and requirements
pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring and reporting of such takings
are set forth. NMFS has defined ``negligible impact'' in 50 CFR 216.103
as ``. . . an impact resulting from the specified activity that cannot
be reasonably expected to, and is not reasonably likely to, adversely
affect the species or stock through effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival.''
Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA established an expedited process
by which citizens of the U.S. can apply for an authorization to
incidentally take small numbers of marine mammals by harassment.
Section 101(a)(5)(D) establishes a 45-day time limit for NMFS review of
an application followed by a 30-day public notice and comment period on
any proposed authorizations for the incidental harassment of marine
mammals. Within 45 days of the close of the comment period, NMFS must
either issue or deny the authorization. Except with respect to certain
activities not pertinent here, the MMPA defines ``harassment'' as ``any
act of pursuit, torment, or annoyance which (i) has the potential to
injure a marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild [Level A
harassment]; or (ii) has the potential to disturb a marine mammal or
marine mammal stock in the wild by causing disruption of behavioral
patterns, including, but not limited to, migration, breathing, nursing,
breeding, feeding, or sheltering [Level B harassment].''
Summary of Request
On July 8, 2014, we received a request from the Navy for
authorization to take marine mammals incidental to pile installation
and removal associated with a pier replacement project in San Diego Bay
at Naval Base Point Loma in San Diego, CA (NBPL), followed on July 14,
2014, by a draft monitoring report for activities conducted under the
previous IHA issued for this project. We reviewed these documents and
provided a request for additional information to the Navy on August 5,
2014; the Navy submitted revised versions of the request on August 14
and August 19, 2014, the latter of which we deemed adequate and
complete. The pier replacement project is planned to occur over four
years; this proposed IHA would cover only the second year of work and
would be valid for a period of one year from the date of issuance.
Hereafter, use of the generic term ``pile driving'' may refer to both
pile installation and removal unless otherwise noted.
The use of both vibratory and impact pile driving is expected to
produce underwater sound at levels that have the potential to result in
behavioral harassment of marine mammals. Species with the expected
potential to be present during all or a portion of the in-water work
window include the California sea lion (Zalophus californianus), harbor
seal (Phoca vitulina richardii), bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus
truncatus), gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus), and either short-beaked
or long-beaked common dolphins (Delphinus spp.). California sea lions
are present year-round and are common in the project area, while
bottlenose dolphins may be present year-round but sightings are highly
variable in Navy marine mammal surveys of northern San Diego Bay.
Harbor seals are also common but have limited occurrence in the project
area in comparison with sea lions. Gray whales may be observed in San
Diego Bay sporadically during migration periods. Common dolphins are
known to occur in nearshore waters outside San Diego Bay, but are only
rarely observed near or in the bay.
This would be the second such IHA, if issued, following the IHA
issued effective from September 1, 2013, through August 31, 2014 (78 FR
44539). A monitoring report is available on the Internet at
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm and provides environmental
information related to proposed issuance of this IHA for public review
and comment.
Description of the Specified Activity
Overview
NBPL provides berthing and support services for Navy submarines and
other fleet assets. The existing fuel pier serves as a fuel depot for
loading and unloading tankers and Navy underway replenishment vessels
that refuel ships at sea (``oilers''), as well as transferring fuel to
local replenishment vessels and other small craft operating in San
Diego Bay, and is the only active Navy fueling facility in southern
California. Portions of the pier are over one hundred years old, while
the newer segment was constructed in 1942. The pier as a whole is
significantly past its design service life and does not meet current
construction standards.
Over the course of four years, the Navy plans to demolish and
remove the existing pier and associated pipelines and appurtenances
while simultaneously replacing it with a generally similar structure
that meets relevant standards for seismic strength and is designed to
better accommodate modern Navy ships. Demolition and construction are
planned to occur in two phases to maintain the fueling capabilities of
the existing pier while the new pier is being constructed. During the
second year of construction (the specified activity considered under
this proposed IHA), approximately 272 piles (18- to 36-in steel pipe
piles) would be installed and 402 piles would be removed (via multiple
methods) over the course of a maximum 135 in-water construction days.
All steel piles will be driven with a vibratory hammer for their
initial embedment depths and finished with an impact hammer, as
necessary.
The proposed actions with the potential to incidentally harass
marine mammals within the waters adjacent to NBPL are vibratory and
impact pile installation and removal of piles via vibratory hammer or
pneumatic chipper. Concurrent use of multiple pile driving rigs is not
planned; however, pile removal conducted as part of demolition
activities (which could occur via a number of techniques other than use
of a vibratory hammer) is expected to occur concurrently with pile
installation conducted as part of construction activities.
Dates and Duration
The entire project is scheduled to occur from 2013-17; the proposed
activities that would be authorized by this IHA, during the second year
of work, would occur for one year from the date of issuance of this
proposed IHA. Under the terms of a memorandum of understanding (MOU)
between the Navy and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), all
noise- and turbidity-producing in-water activities in designated least
tern foraging habitat are to be avoided during the period when least
terns are present and engaged in nesting and foraging (a window from
approximately September 15 through April 1). However, the Navy is
currently negotiating with FWS to extend that window and it is possible
that in-water work, as described below, could occur at any time during
the period of validity of this proposed IHA. The conduct of any such
work would be subject to approval from FWS under the terms of
[[Page 53028]]
the MOU. We expect that in-water work would primarily occur during the
October 1-April 1 period. In-water pile driving work would be limited
to 135 days in total under this proposed IHA. Pile driving would occur
during normal working hours (approximately 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.).
Specific Geographic Region
NBPL is located on the peninsula of Point Loma near the mouth and
along the northern edge of San Diego Bay (see Figures 1-1 and 1-2 in
the Navy's application). San Diego Bay is a narrow, crescent-shaped
natural embayment oriented northwest-southeast with an approximate
length of 24 km and a total area of roughly 4,500 ha. The width of the
bay ranges from 0.3 to 5.8 km, and depths range from 23 m mean lower
low water (MLLW) near the tip of Ballast Point to less than 2 m at the
southern end (see Figure 2-1 of the Navy's application). San Diego Bay
is a heavily urbanized area with a mix of industrial, military, and
recreational uses. The northern and central portions of the bay have
been shaped by historic dredging to support large ship navigation.
Dredging occurs as necessary to maintain constant depth within the
navigation channel. Outside the navigation channel, the bay floor
consists of platforms at depths that vary slightly. Sediments in
northern San Diego Bay are relatively sandy as tidal currents tend to
keep the finer silt and clay fractions in suspension, except in harbors
and elsewhere in the lee of structures where water movement is
diminished. Much of the shoreline consists of riprap and manmade
structures. San Diego Bay is heavily used by commercial, recreational,
and military vessels, with an average of over 80,000 vessel movements
(in or out of the bay) per year (not including recreational boating
within the Bay) (see Table 2-2 of the Navy's application). For more
information about the specific geographic region, please see section
2.3 of the Navy's application.
Detailed Description of Activities
In order to provide context, we described the entire project in our
Federal Register notice of proposed authorization associated with the
first-year IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013). Please see that document
for an overview of the entire fuel pier replacement project, or see the
Navy's Environmental Assessment (2013) for more detail. Here, we
provide an overview of relevant construction methods before describing
only the specific project portions scheduled for completion during the
second work window. Approximately 498 piles in total are planned to be
installed for the project, including steel, concrete, and plastic
piles. For the second year of work, approximately 272 piles would be
installed (all steel pipe piles, 18- to 36-in). Tables 1 and 2 detail
the piles to be installed and removed, respectively, under this
proposed IHA.
Methods, Pile Installation--Vibratory hammers, which can be used to
either install or extract a pile, contain a system of counter-rotating
eccentric weights powered by hydraulic motors and are designed in such
a way that horizontal vibrations cancel out, while vertical vibrations
are transmitted into the pile. The pile driving machine is lifted and
positioned over the pile by means of an excavator or crane, and is
fastened to the pile by a clamp and/or bolts. The vibrations produced
cause liquefaction of the substrate surrounding the pile, enabling the
pile to be extracted or driven into the ground using the weight of the
pile plus the hammer. Impact hammers use a rising and falling piston to
repeatedly strike a pile and drive it into the ground.
We generally require that vibratory driving be used to the maximum
extent feasible, considering project design requirements and site
conditions. Steel piles are typically vibratory-driven for their
initial embedment depths or to refusal and finished with an impact
hammer for proofing or until the pile meets structural requirements
(potentially an approximate 25-125 blows), as necessary. Proofing
involves striking a driven pile with an impact hammer to verify that it
provides the required load-bearing capacity, as indicated by the number
of hammer blows per foot of pile advancement. Non-steel piles--not
planned for installation during this proposed activity--are typically
impact-driven for their entire embedment depth, in part because non-
steel piles are often displacement piles (as opposed to pipe piles) and
require some impact to allow substrate penetration.
The Navy assumes that the contractor will drive approximately two
steel piles per day, with each pile assumed to require up to two hours
of driving, including 1-1.5 hours of vibratory pile driving and up to
0.5 hour of impact pile driving (if necessary).
Methods, Pile Removal--There are multiple methods for pile removal,
including dry pulling, cutting at the mudline, jetting, and vibratory
removal. Typically piles will be cut off at the mudline; however, the
full length of the piles would be pulled at the area where the new
approach segment would be constructed. An attempt will first be made to
dry pull the piles with a barge-mounted crane. A vibratory hammer or a
pneumatic chipper may be used to loosen the piles. Jetting (the
application of a focused stream of water under high pressure) would be
another option to loosen piles that could not be removed through the
previous procedures. Existing caisson elements would be removed with a
clamshell, which is a dredging bucket consisting of two similar halves
that open/close at the bottom and are hinged at the top. The clamshell
would be used to grasp and lift large components. When a wooden pile
cannot be completely pulled out, the pile may be cut at the mudline
using the clamshell's hydraulic jaws and/or a diver-operated underwater
chainsaw, except for piles that are within the footprint of the
approach pier, which may require jetting to remove. The majority of
pile removal will likely not require the use of vibratory extraction
and/or pneumatic chipping, and these methods are included here as
contingency in the event other methods of extraction are not
successful.
Indicator Pile Program (Fall 2014)--The Indicator Pile Program
(IPP) was designed to validate the length of pile required and the
method of installation (vibratory and impact). The original plan called
for approximately twelve steel pipe piles (36- and 48-in diameter) to
be driven in the new pier alignment to verify the driving conditions
and establish the final driving lengths prior to fabrication of the
final production piles that would be used to construct the new pier.
However, the Navy determined that 36-in piles would likely be
sufficient for structural requirements of the new fuel pier and
conducted the IPP under the previous IHA with 30- and 36-in piles (see
``Results of Previous Monitoring'' below). The Navy drove nine piles
(two 30-in and seven 36-in piles) and plans to conclude the IPP under
this proposed IHA by driving an additional two 36-in steel pipe piles.
[[Page 53029]]
Table 1--Details of Piles To Be Installed
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number per pile diameter
Planned number (in)
Purpose Location Planned timing of days ---------------------------
18 24 30 36
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Indicator Pile Program........ Outboard side of Fall 2014........ 1 0 0 0 2
existing pier.
Temporary dolphin............. South of existing Fall 2014........ 5 0 0 10 0
pier.
Temporary shoring piles....... Existing pier Fall 2014........ 5 4 0 0 0
approach and
intersection.
Temporary trestle piles....... North of new Fall 2014........ 14 0 16 0 0
approach trestle.
Abutment piles................ New pier, along Winter 2014-15... 10 0 0 0 18
shoreline.
Approach pier................. New pier Fall 2014-Spring 90 0 0 0 104
footprint. 2015.
Fuel pier..................... New pier Fall 2014........ .............. 0 0 0 95
footprint.
Permanent dolphins............ North of existing Spring 2015...... 10 0 0 23 0
pier.
=================
Totals--272 piles......... ................. Fall 2014-Spring \1\135 4 16 33 219
2015.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Numbers of piles, timing, and number of days associated with any particular component of work are subject to
change. However, the total of 135 days in-water pile driving is an absolute maximum.
Temporary Structures--The Navy plans to install a number of
temporary piles in order to maintain fuel pier function during the
demolition/construction work. A temporary mooring dolphin (a structure
that extends above the water level and is not connected to shore or
other structures, and are often used to extend mooring capacity of a
pier) will be constructed to allow vessels to berth and load/unload
fuel on the existing south segment while the north segment of the
existing pier is under demolition.
Permanent Structures--Initial work for construction of the new pier
is planned to begin during the period of this proposed IHA, including
construction of abutments at the shoreside end of the approach segment
for the new fuel pier and construction of the pier itself. The latter
will include work on the ramped approach pier (lower and upper deck),
two mooring dolphins, and the double-deck fueling pier.
Demolition--Following construction of temporary structures and as
construction of the new pier proceeds, demolition of the north segment
of the existing pier will be conducted. Much of the demolition work
will be above-water, involving removal of decking, utilities, and
appurtenances, but in-water structure removal will also occur, as
described above under ``Methods, Pile Removal.'' Demolition work
planned during the period of this proposed IHA is expected to require
84 days in total. Any of the previously-described methodologies could
be employed for in-water demolition work; however, the Navy anticipates
that those methodologies producing underwater sound with the potential
to cause incidental harassment of marine mammals would only be required
for approximately one-quarter of the total effort. In-water demolition
would always occur concurrently with in-water pile installation;
therefore, sound produced through in-water demolition would always be
subsumed by that produced through in-water pile installation. Pile
removal activities are not carried forward through the take estimation
process (see ``Estimated Incidental Take''). Pile removal using no-
impact methods (e.g., dry pull) may continue outside the in-water work
window.
Table 2--Details of Piles To Be Removed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pile type Number
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Concrete fender piles (14-, 18-, and 24-in)................... 65
Plastic fender piles (13-in).................................. 29
Timber piles (12-in).......................................... 286
Concrete-filled steel caissons................................ 22
=========
Total....................................................... 402
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Description of Work Accomplished
During the first in-water work season, two primary activities were
conducted: Relocation of the Marine Mammal Program and the IPP.
The Navy Marine Mammal Program, administered by Space and Naval
Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR) Systems Center (SSC), was moved
approximately three kilometers to the Naval Mine and Anti-submarine
Warfare Command (NMAWC; see Figures 1-1 and 1-2 of the Navy's
monitoring report). Although not subject to the MMPA, SSC's working
animals were temporarily relocated so that they will not be affected by
the project. Over the course of 25 in-water construction days from
January 28 to March 13, 2014, the Navy removed thirty and installed 81
concrete piles (12- and 16-in). See Table 3-2 of the Navy's monitoring
report for details. Installation was accomplished via a D19-42 American
Pile Driving Equipment, Inc. (APE) diesel hammer with energy capacity
of 23,566-42,800 ft-lbs and fitted with a hydraulic tripping cylinder
with four adjustable power settings that could be reset while driving.
Pile removal was accomplished by jetting and dead pull.
The IPP was described above. Nine steel pipe test piles were
vibratory- and impact-driven over ten work days from April 28 to May
15, 2014, including two 30-in and seven 36-in piles. For the IPP all
piles were initially installed initially using an APE Variable Moment
250 VM Vibratory Hammer Extractor powered by a model 765 hydraulic
power source creating a maximum driving force of 2,389 kilonewtons (269
tons). Impact pile driving equipment consisted of a single acting
diesel impact hammer model D62-22 DELMAG with energy capacity of
76,899-153,799 ft-lbs and fitted with a hydraulic tripping cylinder
with four adjustable power settings that could be reset while driving.
Two more 36-in piles are planned under the currently proposed IHA for
conclusion of the IPP.
Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of the Specified Activity
There are five marine mammal species which are either resident,
have known seasonal occurrence, or have been observed recently in San
Diego Bay, including the California sea lion, harbor seal, bottlenose
dolphin, common dolphin, and gray whale. Note that common dolphins
could be either short-beaked (Delphinus delphis delphis) or long-beaked
(D. capensis capensis). While it is likely that common dolphins
observed in the project area would be long-beaked, as it is the most
frequently stranded species in the area from San Diego Bay to the
[[Page 53030]]
U.S.-Mexico border (Danil and St. Leger, 2011), the species
distributions overlap and it is unlikely that observers would be able
to differentiate them in the field. Therefore, we consider that any
common dolphins observed--and any incidental take of common dolphins--
could be either species. Navy records and other survey results indicate
that other species that occur in the Southern California Bight may have
the potential for isolated occurrence within San Diego Bay or just
offshore. The Pacific white-sided dolphin (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens)
has been sighted along a previously used transect on the opposite side
of the Point Loma peninsula (Merkel and Associates, 2008). Risso's
dolphin (Grampus griseus) is fairly common in southern California
coastal waters (e.g., Campbell et al., 2010), but has not been seen in
San Diego Bay. These species have not been observed near the project
area and are not expected to occur there, and, given the unlikelihood
of their exposure to sound generated from the project, are not
considered further.
We have reviewed the Navy's detailed species descriptions,
including life history information, for accuracy and completeness and
refer the reader to Sections 3 and 4 of the Navy's application instead
of reprinting the information here. Please also refer to NMFS' Web site
(www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/mammals) for generalized species accounts
and to the Navy's Marine Resource Assessment for the Southern
California and Point Mugu Operating Areas, which provides information
regarding the biology and behavior of the marine resources that may
occur in those operating areas (DoN, 2008). The document is publicly
available at www.navfac.navy.mil/productsandservices/
ev/productsandservices/marineresources/
marineresourceassessments.html (accessed August 23,
2014). In addition, we provided information for the potentially
affected stocks, including details of stock-wide status, trends, and
threats, in our Federal Register notice of proposed authorization
associated with the first-year IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013) and
refer the reader to that document rather than reprinting the
information here.
Table 3 lists the marine mammal species with expected potential for
occurrence in the vicinity of NBPL during the project timeframe and
summarizes key information regarding stock status and abundance. See
also Figure 3-2 of the Navy's application for observed occurrence of
marine mammals in the project area. Taxonomically, we follow Committee
on Taxonomy (2014). Please see NMFS' Stock Assessment Reports (SAR),
available at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars, for more detailed accounts of
these stocks' status and abundance. All potentially affected species
are addressed in the Pacific SARs (Carretta et al., 2014).
Table 3--Marine Mammals Potentially Present in the Vicinity of NBPL
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ESA/MMPA
status; Stock abundance (CV, PBR Annual M/ Relative occurrence in
Species Stock strategic (Y/ Nmin, most recent \3\ SI \4\ San Diego Bay; season of
N) \1\ abundance survey) \2\ occurrence
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Cetartiodactyla--Cetacea--Superfamily Mysticeti (baleen whales)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Eschrichtiidae:
Gray whale........................ Eastern North Pacific.... --; N 19,126 (0.071; 18,017; 558 \6\ 127 Rare migratory visitor;
2007). late winter.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Superfamily Odontoceti (toothed whales, dolphins, and porpoises)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Delphinidae:
Bottlenose dolphin................ California coastal....... --; N 323 \5\ (0.13; 290; 2005) 2.4 0.2 Occasional; year-round.
Short-beaked common dolphin....... California/Oregon/ --; N 411,211 (0.21; 343,990; 3,440 64 Rare; year-round (but
Washington. 2008). more common in warm
season).
Long-beaked common dolphin........ California............... --; N 107,016 (0.42; 76,224; 610 13.8 Rare; year-round (but
2009). more common in warm
season).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Carnivora--Superfamily Pinnipedia
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Otariidae (eared seals and sea
lions):
California sea lion............... U.S...................... --; N 296,750 (n/a; 153,337; 9,200 >=431 Abundant; year-round.
2008).
Family Phocidae (earless seals):
Harbor seal....................... California............... --; N 30,196 (0.157; 26,667; 1,600 31 Uncommon and localized;
2009). year-round.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (--) indicates that the species is not listed
under the ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality
exceeds PBR (see footnote 3) or which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species
or stock listed under the ESA is automatically designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
\2\ CV is coefficient of variation; Nmin is the minimum estimate of stock abundance. In some cases, CV is not applicable. For certain stocks of
pinnipeds, abundance estimates are based upon observations of animals (often pups) ashore multiplied by some correction factor derived from knowledge
of the specie's (or similar species') life history to arrive at a best abundance estimate; therefore, there is no associated CV. In these cases, the
minimum abundance may represent actual counts of all animals ashore.
\3\ Potential biological removal, defined by the MMPA as the maximum number of animals, not including natural mortalities, that may be removed from a
marine mammal stock while allowing that stock to reach or maintain its optimum sustainable population size (OSP).
\4\ These values, found in NMFS' SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g., commercial
fisheries, subsistence hunting, ship strike). Annual M/SI often cannot be determined precisely and is in some cases presented as a minimum value.
[[Page 53031]]
\5\ This value is based on photographic mark-recapture surveys conducted along the San Diego coast in 2004-05, but is considered a likely underestimate,
as it does not reflect that approximately 35 percent of dolphins encountered lack identifiable dorsal fin marks (Defran and Weller, 1999). If 35
percent of all animals lack distinguishing marks, then the true population size would be closer to 450-500 animals (Carretta et al., 2014).
\6\ Includes annual Russian harvest of 123 whales.
California Sea Lion
The California sea lion is by far the most commonly-sighted
pinniped species at sea or on land in the vicinity of NBPL and northern
San Diego Bay, where there is a resident non-breeding population.
California sea lions regularly occur on rocks, buoys and other
structures, and especially on the bait barges present in the bay
adjacent to NBPL (see Figure 4-1 of the Navy's application), although
numbers vary greatly as individuals move between the bay and rookeries
on offshore islands. Different age classes of California sea lions are
found in the San Diego region throughout the year (Lowry et al., 1992),
although Navy surveys show that the local population comprises adult
females and subadult males and females, with adult males being
uncommon. The Navy has conducted marine mammal surveys throughout the
north San Diego Bay project area (Merkel and Associates, 2008; Johnson,
2010, 2011; Lerma, 2012, 2014). Sightings include all animals observed
and their locations (using geographical positioning systems). The
majority of observations are of animals hauled out.
Harbor Seal
Harbor seals are relatively uncommon within San Diego Bay, and do
not have a significant mainland California distribution south of Point
Mugu. Sightings in the Navy transect surveys of northern San Diego Bay
cited above have generally been limited to individuals outside of the
project area, on the south side of Ballast Point. The haul-out area
south of Ballast Point is only temporary with overwash of the rocks
occurring daily; primary local harbor seal haul-outs are in La Jolla.
With heavy vessel traffic and noise in the project area, it is likely
that harbor seals seen outside the project area at Ballast Point move
toward Point Loma and preferred foraging habitat rather than actively
foraging in or transiting the project area on a frequent basis.
However, Navy marine mammal monitoring for another project conducted
intermittently from 2010-12 documented several harbor seals near Pier
122 (within the project area) at various times, with the greatest
number of sightings during April and May. Subsequently, Navy monitoring
conducted during year one of the fuel pier project documented increased
numbers of harbor seals in the project area (Lerma, 2014).
Approximately three-quarters of these observations were of animals
hauled out along the NBPL shoreline.
Gray Whale
Two populations of gray whales are recognized, Eastern and Western
North Pacific (ENP and WNP). ENP whales breed and calve primarily in
areas off Baja California and in the Gulf of California. From February
to May, whales typically migrate northbound to summer/fall feeding
areas in the Chukchi and northern Bering Seas, with the southbound
return to calving areas typically occurring in November and December.
WNP whales are known to feed in the Okhotsk Sea and off of Kamchatka
before migrating south to poorly known wintering grounds, possibly in
the South China Sea.
The two populations have historically been considered
geographically isolated from each other; however, recent data from
satellite-tracked whales indicates that there is some overlap between
the stocks. Two WNP whales were tracked from Russian foraging areas
along the Pacific rim to Baja California (Mate et al., 2011), and, in
one case where the satellite tag remained attached to the whale for a
longer period, a WNP whale was tracked from Russia to Mexico and back
again (IWC, 2012). Between 22-24 WNP whales are known to have occurred
in the eastern Pacific through comparisons of ENP and WNP photo-
identification catalogs (IWC, 2012; Weller et al., 2011; Burdin et al.,
2011), and WNP animals comprised 8.1 percent of gray whales identified
during a recent field season off of Vancouver Island (Weller et al.,
2012). In addition, two genetic matches of WNP whales have been
recorded off of Santa Barbara, CA (Lang et al., 2011). More recently,
Urban et al. (2013) compared catalogs of photo-identified individuals
from Mexico with photographs of whales off Russia and reported a total
of 21 matches. Therefore, a portion of the WNP population is assumed to
migrate, at least in some years, to the eastern Pacific during the
winter breeding season.
However, only ENP whales are expected to occur in the project area.
The likelihood of any gray whale being exposed to project sound to the
degree considered in this document is already low, as it would require
a migrating whale to linger for an extended period of time, or for
multiple migrating whales to linger for shorter periods of time. While
such an occurrence is not unknown, it is uncommon. Further, of the
approximately 20,000 gray whales migrating through the Southern
California Bight, it is extremely unlikely that one found in San Diego
Bay would be one of the approximately twenty WNP whales that have been
documented in the eastern Pacific (less than one percent probability).
The likelihood that a WNP whale would be exposed to elevated levels of
sound from the specified activities is insignificant and discountable
and WNP whales are not considered further in this document.
Peak abundance of gray whales off the coast of San Diego is
typically during January during the southbound migration and in March
as whales return north, although females with calves, which depart
Mexico later than males or females without calves, can be sighted from
March through May or June (Leatherwood, 1974; Poole, 1984; Rugh et al.,
2001). Gray whales are not expected in the project area except during
the northward migration, when they are closest to the coast and may be
infrequently observed offshore of San Diego Bay (Rice et al., 1981).
Migrating gray whales that do transit nearshore waters would likely be
traveling, rather than foraging, and would likely be present only
briefly at typical travel speeds of 3 kn (Perryman et al., 1999, Mate
and Urb[aacute]n-Ramirez, 2003). Gray whales are known to occur near
the mouth of San Diego Bay, and occasionally enter the bay. However,
their occurrence in San Diego Bay is sporadic and unpredictable. In
recent years, local records show that solitary individuals have entered
the bay and remained for varying lengths of time during March 2009,
April 2010, and July 2011. Navy field notes show an occurrence of one
gray whale that lingered in the northern part of the bay for two weeks.
Bottlenose Dolphin
As seen in the Navy's marine mammal surveys of San Diego Bay, cited
above, coastal bottlenose dolphins have occurred within San Diego Bay
sporadically and in variable numbers and locations. California coastal
bottlenose dolphins show little site fidelity and likely move within
their
[[Page 53032]]
home range in response to patchy concentrations of nearshore prey
(Defran et al., 1999, Bearzi et al., 2009). After finding
concentrations of prey, animals may then forage within a more limited
spatial extent to take advantage of this local accumulation until such
time that prey abundance is reduced, likely then shifting location once
again and possibly covering larger distances. Navy surveys frequently
result in no observations of bottlenose dolphins, and sightings have
ranged from 0-8 groups observed (0-40 individuals).
Common Dolphin
Common dolphins are present in the coastal waters outside of San
Diego Bay, but are considered to be an intermittent and transient
visitor to the bay itself and had not been observed within the bay
during Navy surveys conducted prior to the project. However, common
dolphins were observed within the bay on three occasions (twelve, five,
and two individuals) on two separate days during monitoring conducted
during the IPP. Sightings of long-beaked common dolphins are
predominantly near shore, whereas those of short-beaked common dolphins
extend throughout the coastal and offshore waters (Carretta et al.
2014). The long-beaked common dolphin has been documented during Navy
training exercises just offshore and to the south of San Diego Bay
(Danil and St. Leger, 2011), whereas the short-beaked species has not.
Potential Effects of the Specified Activity on Marine Mammals
This section is intended to provide a summary and discussion of the
ways that components of the specified activity may impact marine
mammals. This discussion includes reactions that we consider to rise to
the level of a take and those that we do not consider to rise to the
level of a take (for example, with acoustics, we may include a
discussion of studies that showed animals not reacting at all to sound
or exhibiting barely measurable avoidance). This information is
provided as a background of potential effects and does not consider
either the specific manner in which this activity will be carried out
or the mitigation that will be implemented, and how either of those
will shape the anticipated impacts from this specific activity. The
``Estimated Take by Incidental Harassment'' section later in this
document will include a quantitative analysis of the number of
individuals that are expected to be taken by this activity. The
``Negligible Impact Analysis'' section will include the analysis of how
this specific activity will impact marine mammals and will consider the
content of this section, the ``Estimated Take by Incidental
Harassment'' section, the ``Proposed Mitigation'' section, and the
``Anticipated Effects on Marine Mammal Habitat'' section to draw
conclusions regarding the likely impacts of this activity on the
reproductive success or survivorship of individuals and from that on
the affected marine mammal populations or stocks.
In our Federal Register notice of proposed authorization associated
with the first-year IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013), we described in
detail the potential effects of the Navy's proposed activity on marine
mammals, including general background information on sound and marine
mammal hearing and a description of sound sources and ambient sound.
Rather than reprint the information here, we refer the reader to that
document. However, because these terms are used frequently in this
document, we provide brief definitions of relevant acoustic terminology
below:
Sound Pressure Level (SPL): Sound pressure is the force
per unit area, usually expressed in microPascals ([mu]Pa), where one
Pascal equals one Newton exerted over an area of one square meter. The
SPL is expressed in decibels (dB) as twenty times the logarithm to the
base ten of the ratio between the pressure exerted by the sound to a
referenced sound pressure. SPL is the quantity that is directly
measured by a sound level meter. For underwater sound, SPL in dB is
referenced to one microPascal (re 1 [mu]Pa), unless otherwise stated.
For airborne sound, SPL in dB is referenced to 20 microPascals (re 20
[mu]Pa), unless otherwise stated.
Frequency: Frequency is expressed in terms of
oscillations, or cycles, per second. Cycles per second are commonly
referred to as hertz (Hz). Typical human hearing ranges from 20 Hz to
20 kilohertz (kHz).
Peak sound pressure: The instantaneous maximum of the
absolute positive or negative pressure over the frequency range from 20
Hz to 20 kHz and presented in dB.
Root mean square SPL: For impact pile driving, overall dB
rms levels are characterized by integrating sound for each waveform
across ninety percent of the acoustic energy in each wave and averaging
all waves in the pile driving event. This value is referred to as the
rms 90%. With this method, the time averaging per pulse varies.
Sound Exposure Level (SEL): A measure of energy,
specifically the dB level of the time integral of the squared-
instantaneous sound pressure, normalized to a one second period. It is
a useful metric for assessing cumulative exposure because it enables
sounds of differing duration, to be compared in terms of total energy.
The accumulated SEL (SELcum) is used to describe the SEL
from multiple events (e.g., many pile strikes). This can be calculated
directly as a logarithmic sum of the individual single-strike SELs for
the pile strikes that were used to install the pile.
Level Z weighted (unweighted), equivalent
(LZeq): LZeq is a value recorded by the SLM that
represents SEL SPL over a specified time period or interval. The LZeq
is most typically referred to in one-second intervals or over an entire
event.
Level Z weighted (unweighted), fast (LZFmax):
LZFmax is a value recorded by the SLM that represents the
maximum rms value recorded for any 125 millisecond time frame during
each individual recording.
Anticipated Effects on Habitat
In our Federal Register notice of proposed authorization associated
with the first-year IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013), we described in
detail the anticipated effects of the Navy's proposed activity on
marine mammal habitat, including effects to prey and to foraging
habitat. Rather than reprint the information here, we refer the reader
to that document.
In summary, given the short daily duration of sound associated with
individual pile driving events and the relatively small areas being
affected, pile driving activities associated with the proposed action
are not likely to have a permanent, adverse effect on any fish habitat,
or populations of fish species. The area around NBPL is heavily altered
with significant levels of industrial and recreational activity, and is
unlikely to harbor significant amounts of forage fish. Thus, any
impacts to marine mammal habitat are not expected to cause significant
or long-term consequences for individual marine mammals or their
populations.
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA,
NMFS must set forth the permissible methods of taking pursuant to such
activity, and other means of effecting the least practicable impact on
such species or stock and its habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of such species or stock for taking for certain
subsistence uses.
The mitigation strategies described below largely follow those
required and successfully implemented under the first-year IHA. For
this proposed IHA,
[[Page 53033]]
data from acoustic monitoring conducted during the first year of work
was used to estimate zones of influence (ZOIs; see ``Estimated Take by
Incidental Harassment''); these values were used to develop mitigation
measures for pile driving activities at NBPL. The ZOIs effectively
represent the mitigation zone that would be established around each
pile to prevent Level A harassment to marine mammals, while providing
estimates of the areas within which Level B harassment might occur. In
addition to the measures described later in this section, the Navy
would employ the following standard mitigation measures:
(a) Conduct briefings between construction supervisors and crews,
marine mammal monitoring team, acoustical monitoring team, and Navy
staff prior to the start of all pile driving activity, and when new
personnel join the work, in order to explain responsibilities,
communication procedures, marine mammal monitoring protocol, and
operational procedures.
(b) For in-water heavy machinery work with the potential to affect
marine mammals (other than pile driving), if a marine mammal comes
within 10 m, operations shall cease and vessels shall reduce speed to
the minimum level required to maintain steerage and safe working
conditions. This type of work could include the following activities:
(1) Movement of the barge to the pile location and (2) removal of the
pile from the water column/substrate via a crane (i.e., dead pull). For
these activities, monitoring would take place from 15 minutes prior to
initiation until the action is complete.
Monitoring and Shutdown for Pile Driving
The following measures would apply to the Navy's mitigation through
shutdown and disturbance zones:
Shutdown Zone--For all pile driving and removal activities, the
Navy will establish a shutdown zone intended to contain the area in
which SPLs equal or exceed the 180/190 decibel (dB) root mean square
(rms) acoustic injury criteria. The purpose of a shutdown zone is to
define an area within which shutdown of activity would occur upon
sighting of a marine mammal (or in anticipation of an animal entering
the defined area), thus preventing injury of marine mammals (serious
injury or death are unlikely outcomes even in the absence of mitigation
measures). Radial distances for shutdown zones are shown in Table 7.
For certain activities, the shutdown zone would not exist because
source levels are lower than the threshold, or the source levels
indicate that the radial distance to the threshold would be less than
10 m. However, a minimum shutdown zone of 10 m will be established
during all pile driving and removal activities, regardless of the
estimated zone. These precautionary measures are intended to prevent
the already unlikely possibility of physical interaction with
construction equipment and to establish a precautionary minimum zone
with regard to acoustic effects.
Disturbance Zone--Disturbance zones are the areas in which SPLs
equal or exceed 160 and 120 dB rms (for impulse and continuous sound,
respectively). Disturbance zones provide utility for monitoring
conducted for mitigation purposes (i.e., shutdown zone monitoring) by
establishing monitoring protocols for areas adjacent to the shutdown
zones. Monitoring of disturbance zones enables observers to be aware of
and communicate the presence of marine mammals in the project area but
outside the shutdown zone and thus prepare for potential shutdowns of
activity. However, the primary purpose of disturbance zone monitoring
is for documenting incidents of Level B harassment; disturbance zone
monitoring is discussed in greater detail later (see ``Proposed
Monitoring and Reporting''). Nominal radial distances for disturbance
zones are shown in Table 7.
In order to document observed incidences of harassment, monitors
record all marine mammal observations, regardless of location. The
observer's location, as well as the location of the pile being driven,
is known from a GPS. The location of the animal is estimated as a
distance from the observer, which is then compared to the location from
the pile. If acoustic monitoring is being conducted for that pile, a
received SPL may be estimated, or the received level may be estimated
on the basis of past or subsequent acoustic monitoring. It may then be
determined whether the animal was exposed to sound levels constituting
incidental harassment in post-processing of observational and acoustic
data, and a precise accounting of observed incidences of harassment
created. Therefore, although the predicted distances to behavioral
harassment thresholds are useful for estimating incidental harassment
for purposes of authorizing levels of incidental take, actual take may
be determined in part through the use of empirical data.
Monitoring Protocols--Monitoring would be conducted before, during,
and after pile driving activities. In addition, observers shall record
all incidents of marine mammal occurrence, regardless of distance from
activity, and shall document any behavioral reactions in concert with
distance from piles being driven. Observations made outside the
shutdown zone will not result in shutdown; that pile segment would be
completed without cessation, unless the animal approaches or enters the
shutdown zone, at which point all pile driving activities would be
halted. Monitoring will take place from fifteen minutes prior to
initiation through thirty minutes post-completion of pile driving
activities. Pile driving activities include the time to remove a single
pile or series of piles, as long as the time elapsed between uses of
the pile driving equipment is no more than thirty minutes. Please see
the Acoustic and Marine Species Monitoring Plan (available at
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm) for full details of the
monitoring protocols.
The following additional measures apply to visual monitoring:
(1) Monitoring will be conducted by qualified observers, who will
be placed at the best vantage point(s) practicable (as defined in the
Marine Mammal Monitoring Plan) to monitor for marine mammals and
implement shutdown/delay procedures when applicable by calling for the
shutdown to the hammer operator. Qualified observers are trained
biologists, with the following minimum qualifications:
Visual acuity in both eyes (correction is permissible)
sufficient for discernment of moving targets at the water's surface
with ability to estimate target size and distance; use of binoculars
may be necessary to correctly identify the target;
Advanced education in biological science or related field
(undergraduate degree or higher is required);
Experience and ability to conduct field observations and
collect data according to assigned protocols (this may include academic
experience);
Experience or training in the field identification of
marine mammals, including the identification of behaviors;
Sufficient training, orientation, or experience with the
construction operation to provide for personal safety during
observations;
Writing skills sufficient to prepare a report of
observations including but not limited to the number and species of
marine mammals observed; dates and times when in-water construction
activities were conducted; dates and times when in-water construction
activities were suspended to avoid potential incidental injury from
construction sound of marine mammals observed within a defined shutdown
[[Page 53034]]
zone; and marine mammal behavior; and
Ability to communicate orally, by radio or in person, with
project personnel to provide real-time information on marine mammals
observed in the area as necessary.
(2) Prior to the start of pile driving activity, the shutdown zone
will be monitored for fifteen minutes to ensure that it is clear of
marine mammals. Pile driving will only commence once observers have
declared the shutdown zone clear of marine mammals; animals will be
allowed to remain in the shutdown zone (i.e., must leave of their own
volition) and their behavior will be monitored and documented. The
shutdown zone may only be declared clear, and pile driving started,
when the entire shutdown zone is visible (i.e., when not obscured by
dark, rain, fog, etc.). In addition, if such conditions should arise
during impact pile driving that is already underway, the activity would
be halted.
(3) If a marine mammal approaches or enters the shutdown zone
during the course of pile driving operations, activity will be halted
and delayed until either the animal has voluntarily left and been
visually confirmed beyond the shutdown zone or fifteen minutes have
passed without re-detection of the animal. Monitoring will be conducted
throughout the time required to drive a pile.
Sound Attenuation Devices
The use of bubble curtains to reduce underwater sound from impact
pile driving was considered prior to the start of the project but was
determined to not be practicable. Use of a bubble curtain in a channel
with substantial current may not be effective, as unconfined bubbles
are likely to be swept away and confined curtain systems may be
difficult to deploy effectively in high currents. Data gathered during
monitoring of construction on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge
indicated that no reduction in the overall linear sound level resulted
from use of a bubble curtain in deep water with relatively strong
current, and the distance to the 190 dB zone was considered to be the
same with and without the bubble curtain (Illingworth & Rodkin, 2001).
During project monitoring for pile driving associated with the
Richmond-San Rafael Bridge, also in San Francisco Bay, it was observed
that performance in moderate current was significantly reduced (Oestman
et al., 2009). Lucke et al. (2011) also note that the effectiveness of
most currently used curtain designs may be compromised in stronger
currents and greater water depths. We believe that conditions
(relatively deep water and strong tidal currents of up to 3 kn) at the
project site would disperse the bubbles and compromise the
effectiveness of sound attenuation.
Timing Restrictions
In-order to avoid impacts to least tern populations when they are
most likely to be foraging and nesting, in-water work will be
concentrated from October 1-March 31. However, this limitation is in
accordance with agreements between the Navy and FWS, and is not a
requirement of this proposed IHA. All in-water construction activities
would occur only during daylight hours (sunrise to sunset).
Soft-Start
The use of a soft start procedure is believed to provide additional
protection to marine mammals by warning or providing a chance to leave
the area prior to the hammer operating at full capacity, and typically
involves a requirement to initiate sound from the hammer at reduced
energy followed by a waiting period. This procedure is repeated two
additional times. It is difficult to specify the reduction in energy
for any given hammer because of variation across drivers and, for
impact hammers, the actual number of strikes at reduced energy will
vary because operating the hammer at less than full power results in
``bouncing'' of the hammer as it strikes the pile, resulting in
multiple ``strikes.'' The project will utilize soft start techniques
for both impact and vibratory pile driving. We require the Navy to
initiate sound from vibratory hammers for fifteen seconds at reduced
energy followed by a thirty-second waiting period, with the procedure
repeated two additional times. For impact driving, we require an
initial set of three strikes from the impact hammer at reduced energy,
followed by a thirty-second waiting period, then two subsequent three
strike sets. Soft start will be required at the beginning of each day's
pile driving work and at any time following a cessation of pile driving
of thirty minutes or longer (specific to either vibratory or impact
driving).
We have carefully evaluated the Navy's proposed mitigation measures
and considered their effectiveness in past implementation to
preliminarily determine whether they are likely to effect the least
practicable impact on the affected marine mammal species and stocks and
their habitat. Our evaluation of potential measures included
consideration of the following factors in relation to one another: (1)
The manner in which, and the degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure is expected to minimize adverse impacts
to marine mammals, (2) the proven or likely efficacy of the specific
measure to minimize adverse impacts as planned; and (3) the
practicability of the measure for applicant implementation.
Any mitigation measure(s) we prescribe should be able to
accomplish, have a reasonable likelihood of accomplishing (based on
current science), or contribute to the accomplishment of one or more of
the general goals listed below:
(1) Avoidance or minimization of injury or death of marine mammals
wherever possible (goals 2, 3, and 4 may contribute to this goal).
(2) A reduction in the number (total number or number at
biologically important time or location) of individual marine mammals
exposed to stimuli expected to result in incidental take (this goal may
contribute to 1, above, or to reducing takes by behavioral harassment
only).
(3) A reduction in the number (total number or number at
biologically important time or location) of times any individual marine
mammal would be exposed to stimuli expected to result in incidental
take (this goal may contribute to 1, above, or to reducing takes by
behavioral harassment only).
(4) A reduction in the intensity of exposure to stimuli expected to
result in incidental take (this goal may contribute to 1, above, or to
reducing the severity of behavioral harassment only).
(5) Avoidance or minimization of adverse effects to marine mammal
habitat, paying particular attention to the prey base, blockage or
limitation of passage to or from biologically important areas,
permanent destruction of habitat, or temporary disturbance of habitat
during a biologically important time.
(6) For monitoring directly related to mitigation, an increase in
the probability of detecting marine mammals, thus allowing for more
effective implementation of the mitigation.
Based on our evaluation of the Navy's proposed measures, as well as
any other potential measures that may be relevant to the specified
activity, we have preliminarily determined that the proposed mitigation
measures provide the means of effecting the least practicable impact on
marine mammal species or stocks and their habitat, paying particular
attention to rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance.
[[Page 53035]]
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA for an activity, Section 101(a)(5)(D) of
the MMPA states that NMFS must set forth ``requirements pertaining to
the monitoring and reporting of such taking''. The MMPA implementing
regulations at 50 CFR 216.104(a)(13) indicate that requests for
incidental take authorizations must include the suggested means of
accomplishing the necessary monitoring and reporting that will result
in increased knowledge of the species and of the level of taking or
impacts on populations of marine mammals that are expected to be
present in the proposed action area.
Any monitoring requirement we prescribe should improve our
understanding of one or more of the following:
Occurrence of marine mammal species in action area (e.g.,
presence, abundance, distribution, density).
Nature, scope, or context of likely marine mammal exposure
to potential stressors/impacts (individual or cumulative, acute or
chronic), through better understanding of: (1) Action or environment
(e.g., source characterization, propagation, ambient noise); (2)
Affected species (e.g., life history, dive patterns); (3) Co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the action; or (4) Biological or
behavioral context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or feeding areas).
Individual responses to acute stressors, or impacts of
chronic exposures (behavioral or physiological).
How anticipated responses to stressors impact either: (1)
Long-term fitness and survival of an individual; or (2) Population,
species, or stock.
Effects on marine mammal habitat and resultant impacts to
marine mammals.
Mitigation and monitoring effectiveness.
Please see the Acoustic and Marine Species Monitoring Plan
(available at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm) for full
details of the requirements for monitoring and reporting. Notional
monitoring locations (for biological and acoustic monitoring) are shown
in Figure 3-1 of the Plan. The purpose of this Plan is to provide
protocols for acoustic and marine mammal monitoring implemented during
pile driving and removal activities associated with the completion of
the IPP, as well as the initial production phase of the fuel pier
replacement. We have preliminarily determined this monitoring plan,
which is summarized here and which largely follows the monitoring
strategies required and successfully implemented under the first-year
IHA, to be sufficient to meet the MMPA's monitoring and reporting
requirements. The previous monitoring plan was modified to integrate
adaptive changes to the monitoring methodologies as well as updates to
the scheduled construction activities. Monitoring objectives are as
follows:
Monitor in-water construction activities: (1) Implement
in-situ acoustic monitoring efforts to continue to measure SPLs from
in-water construction activities not previously monitored or validated
during the previous IHA; (2) collect and evaluate acoustic sound levels
for ten percent of the pile driving activities conducted along the
outboard section of the fuel pier sufficient to confirm measured
contours associated with the acoustic ZOIs; (3) collect acoustic sound
recordings sufficient to document sound source levels for vibratory and
pneumatic chipping activities for the first ten percent of the proposed
piles to be removed along the outboard section.
Monitor marine mammal occurrence and behavior during in-
water construction activities to minimize marine mammal impacts and
effectively document marine mammals occurring within ZOI boundaries.
Continue the collection of ambient underwater sound
measurements in the absence of project activities to develop a rigorous
baseline for the project area.
Acoustic Measurements
The primary purpose of acoustic monitoring is to empirically verify
modeled injury and behavioral disturbance zones (defined at radial
distances to NMFS-specified thresholds of 160-, 180-, and 190-dB (rms)
for underwater sound (where applicable) and 90- and 100-dB (unweighted)
for airborne sound; see ``Estimated Take by Incidental Harassment''
below). For non-pulsed sound, distances will be determined for
attenuation to the point at which sound becomes indistinguishable from
background levels. Empirical acoustic monitoring data will be used to
document transmission loss values determined from measurements
collected during the IPP and examine site-specific differences in SPL
and affected ZOIs on an as needed basis.
Should monitoring results indicate it is appropriate to do so,
marine mammal mitigation zones would be revised as necessary to
encompass actual ZOIs in subsequent years of the fuel pier replacement
project. Acoustic monitoring will be conducted as specified in the
approved Acoustic and Marine Species Monitoring Plan. Please see Table
2-2 of the Plan for a list of equipment to be used during acoustic
monitoring.
Some details of the methodology include:
Hydroacoustic monitoring for vibratory and impact driving
of steel piles in areas bayward of the existing fuel pier will occur
during the first ten percent of all pile driving events in order to
document SPLs at the measured distances to the injury isopleths. In
conjunction with measurements of SPLs at the source (10 m) and shutdown
(approximately 300 m, or intermediate of the pinniped and cetacean
shutdown ZOIs) monitoring locations, there will also be intermittent
verification of the disturbance ZOIs throughout pile driving. Of the
ten percent of pile driving events acoustically measured, one hundred
percent of the data will be analyzed. The resulting data set will be
analyzed to examine and confirm SPLs and rates of transmission loss for
each separate in-water construction activity. The Navy will also
conduct acoustic monitoring for pile removal activities that utilize
equipment and/or methods not previously evaluated (e.g., vibratory
removal and pneumatic chipping).
For underwater recordings, sound level meter systems will
follow methods in accordance with NMFS' 2012 guidance for the
collection of source levels.
For airborne recordings, to the extent that logistics and
security allow, reference recordings will be collected at approximately
15 m from the source via a sound meter with integrated microphone.
Other distances may also be utilized to obtain better data if the
signal cannot be isolated clearly due to other sound sources (e.g.,
barges or generators).
Hydrophones will be placed using a static line deployed
from a stationary (temporarily moored) vessel. Locations of acoustic
recordings will be collected via GPS. A depth sounder and/or weighted
tape measure will be used to determine the depth of the water. The
hydrophone will be attached to a weighted nylon cord to maintain a
constant depth.
Each hydrophone (underwater) and microphone (airborne)
will be calibrated at the start of the monitoring time frame and
applicable systems will be checked at the beginning of each day of
monitoring activity.
For each monitored location, a hydrophone will be deployed
at mid-depth in order to evaluate site specific attenuation and
propagation characteristics.
[[Page 53036]]
In order to determining the area encompassed by the
relevant isopleths for marine mammals, hydrophones will collect data at
various distances from the source to accurately capture deviations in
the pressure levels as well as examine geospatial differences in the
spreading loss model caused by physical conditions and bathymetric
properties throughout the sound field.
Ambient conditions, both airborne and underwater, will be
measured at the project site in the absence of construction activities
to determine background sound levels. Ambient levels will be recorded
over the frequency range from 7 Hz to 20 kHz. Ambient conditions will
be recorded at least three times during the IHA period consistent with
NMFS' 2012 guidance for the measurement of ambient sound. Each time,
data will be collected for eight-hour periods for three days during
typical working hours (7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday)
in the absence of in-water construction activities. The three recording
periods will be spaced to adequately capture variation across the
notional work window (October-March).
Underwater SPLs would be measured at the source and at the
shutdown ZOIs for the entire duration of each recoded event. The SPLs
will be monitored in real time by observing the LZeq (1 sec)
expressed in dB during each pile driving event. Acoustic data
recordings will be post-processed to determine maximum rms SPLs. Sound
levels will be measured in Pascals (a unit of pressure), which are
easily converted to dB.
Airborne levels would be recorded as unweighted in dB and
the distance to marine mammal behavioral disturbance thresholds would
be calculated.
Environmental data would be collected including but not
limited to: Wind speed and direction, air temperature, humidity,
surface water temperature, water depth, wave height, weather conditions
and other factors that could contribute to influencing the airborne and
underwater sound levels (e.g., aircraft, boats).
The monitoring coordinator will supply the acoustics
specialist with the substrate composition, hammer model and size,
hammer energy settings and any changes to those settings during the
piles being monitored, depth of the pile being driven, and blows per
foot for the piles monitored.
For acoustically monitored piles, data from the continuous
monitoring locations (10 m and ~300 m from source) will be post-
processed to obtain the maximum peak pressure level recorded for all
the strikes associated with each pile, expressed in dB. This maximum
value will originate from the phase of pile driving during which hammer
energy was also at maximum (referred to as Level 4).
From all the strikes associated with each pile occurring
during the Level 4 phase these additional measures will be made:
[cir] Mean, minimum, and maximum rms pressure level in dB
[cir] mean duration of a pile strike (based on the ninety percent
energy criterion)
[cir] number of hammer strikes
[cir] mean, minimum, and maximum single strike Sound Exposure Level
(SEL) in [dB re [mu]Pa\2\ sec]
[cir] cumulative SEL as defined by the mean single strike SEL +
10*log ( hammer strikes) in [dB re [mu]Pa\2\ sec]
[cir] A frequency spectrum (pressure spectral density) in [dB re
[mu]Pa\2\ per Hz] based on the average of up to eight successive
strikes with similar sound. Spectral resolution will be 1 Hz and the
spectrum will cover nominal range from 7 Hz to 20 kHz.
Visual Marine Mammal Observations
The Navy will collect sighting data and behavioral responses to
construction for marine mammal species observed in the region of
activity during the period of activity. All observers will be trained
in marine mammal identification and behaviors and are required to have
no other construction-related tasks while conducting monitoring. The
Navy will monitor the shutdown zone and disturbance zone before,
during, and after pile driving as described under ``Proposed
Mitigation'' and in the Acoustic and Marine Species Monitoring Plan,
with observers located at the best practicable vantage points. Notional
monitoring locations are shown in Figures 3-1 of the Navy's Plan.
Please see that plan, available at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm, for full details of the required marine mammal
monitoring. Based on our requirements, the Navy would implement the
following procedures for pile driving:
MMOs would be located at the best vantage point(s) in
order to properly see the entire shutdown zone and as much of the
disturbance zone as possible.
During all observation periods, observers will use
binoculars and the naked eye to search continuously for marine mammals.
If the shutdown zones are obscured by fog or poor lighting
conditions, pile driving at that location will not be initiated until
that zone is visible. Should such conditions arise while impact driving
is underway, the activity would be halted.
The shutdown and disturbance zones around the pile will be
monitored for the presence of marine mammals before, during, and after
any pile driving or removal activity.
One MMO will be placed on the active pile driving rig in order to
observe the respective shutdown zones for vibratory and impact pile
driving. Monitoring would be primarily dedicated to observing the
shutdown zone; however, MMOs would record all marine mammal sightings
beyond these distances provided it did not interfere with their
effectiveness at carrying out the shutdown procedures. Additionally,
three to seven land, pier, or vessel-based MMOs will be positioned to
monitor the shutdown zones and the buffer zones (one to the northeast
and one to the south at the mouth of San Diego Bay). Because there are
different threshold distances for different types of marine mammals
(pinniped and cetacean), the observation platform at the shutdown zone
will concentrate on the 190 dB rms and 180 dB rms isopleths locations
and station the observers and vessels accordingly. The MMOs associated
with these platforms will record all visible marine mammal sightings.
Confirmed takes will be registered once the sightings data has been
overlaid with the isopleths identified in Table 7 and visualized in
Figure 6-2 of the Navy's application, or based on refined acoustic
data, if amendments to the ZOIs are needed. The acousticians on board
will be noting SPLs in real-time, but, to avoid biasing the
observations, will not communicate that information directly to the
MMOs. These platforms may move closer to, or farther from, the source
depending on whether received SPLs are less than or greater than the
regulatory threshold values. All MMOs will be in radio communication
with each other so that the MMOs will know when to anticipate incoming
marine mammal species and when they are tracking the same animals
observed elsewhere.
Individuals implementing the monitoring protocol will assess its
effectiveness using an adaptive approach. Monitoring biologists will
use their best professional judgment throughout implementation and seek
improvements to these methods when deemed appropriate. Any
modifications to protocol will be coordinated between NMFS and the
Navy.
Data Collection
We require that observers use approved data forms. Among other
pieces of information, the Navy will
[[Page 53037]]
record detailed information about any implementation of shutdowns,
including the distance of animals to the pile and description of
specific actions that ensued and resulting behavior of the animal, if
any. In addition, the Navy will attempt to distinguish between the
number of individual animals taken and the number of incidents of take.
We require that, at a minimum, the following information be collected
on the sighting forms:
Date and time that monitored activity begins or ends;
Construction activities occurring during each observation
period;
Weather parameters (e.g., percent cover, visibility);
Water conditions (e.g., sea state, tide state);
Species, numbers, and, if possible, sex and age class of
marine mammals;
Description of any observable marine mammal behavior
patterns, including bearing and direction of travel and distance from
pile driving activity, and if possible, the correlation to measured
SPLs;
Distance from pile driving activities to marine mammals
and distance from the marine mammals to the observation point;
Description of implementation of mitigation measures
(e.g., shutdown or delay);
Locations of all marine mammal observations; and
Other human activity in the area.
In addition, photographs would be taken of any gray whales
observed. These photographs would be submitted to NMFS' West Coast
Regional Office for comparison with photo-identification catalogs to
determine whether the whale is a member of the WNP population.
Reporting
A draft report would be submitted to NMFS within 45 calendar days
of the completion of marine mammal monitoring, or sixty days prior to
the issuance of any subsequent IHA for this project, whichever comes
first. The report will include marine mammal observations pre-activity,
during-activity, and post-activity during pile driving days, and will
also provide descriptions of any behavioral responses to construction
activities by marine mammals and a complete description of all
mitigation shutdowns and the results of those actions. A final report
would be prepared and submitted within thirty days following resolution
of comments on the draft report. Required contents of the monitoring
reports are described in more detail in the Navy's Acoustic and Marine
Species Monitoring Plan.
Monitoring Results From Previously Authorized Activities
The Navy complied with the mitigation and monitoring required under
the previous authorization for this project. Acoustic and marine mammal
monitoring was implemented as required, with marine mammal monitoring
occurring before, during, and after each pile driving event. During the
course of these activities, the Navy did not exceed the take levels
authorized under the IHA. However, the Navy did record one observation
of a California sea lion within the defined 190-dB shutdown zone (see
below for further discussion).
The objectives of the monitoring plan were largely similar to those
described above for the year two monitoring plan. For acoustic
monitoring, the primary goal was to validate the acoustic ZOI contours
utilizing hydroacoustic measurements collected during the IPP to update
estimated SPL contours (isopleths) developed from the transmission loss
modeling effort conducted prior to the start of the project and to
collect more data to validate the transmission loss model. In addition,
acoustic monitoring was conducted for pile driving of concrete piles
associated with the temporary relocation of the Navy's Marine Mammal
Program (see ``Description of Work Accomplished'').
Acoustic Monitoring Results--For a full description of acoustic
monitoring methodology, please see section 2.1.2 of the Navy's
monitoring report, including Figure 2-1 for representative monitoring
locations. Results are displayed in Table 4.
For acoustic monitoring associated with the marine mammal
relocation at NMAWC, a continuous hydroacoustic monitoring system was
positioned at source (10 m from the pile being installed or removed)
and at the edge of the predicted outer limit of the 160-dB behavioral
ZOI for impact driving of concrete piles, which was estimated to be
approximately 74 m. Hydrophones were deployed from the dock, barge, or
moored vessel at half the water depth measured by a weighed measuring
tape or calibrated depth sounder. The depth in which pile driving took
place ranged between 2.4 and 4.7 m. SPLs measured at the far-field
varied in distance from 25 to 400 m from the installed pile to
determine variations in transmission loss for individual piles and
sites. Airborne sound was collected at 15.2 m and also at distances
ranging from 30.5 to 122 m using SLMs mounted on tripods at 1.5 m
elevation above the dock. Airborne sound measurements were collected
intermittently, but in sufficient amounts to determine airborne ZOIs
for pinniped species.
For monitoring associated with the IPP at the fuel pier site,
hydroacoustic monitoring systems recorded underwater sound levels from
piers, barges, or anchored vessels at source (10 m), shutdown (125 to
300 m), and at the predicted far-field behavioral threshold ZOI
locations. Pile driving water depth was <4.7 m for piles driven on the
shore side of the pier and ranged from 12-17 m for piles driven on the
bay side of the pier. The far-field locations were located near Harbor
Island to the northeast and adjacent to the Zuniga Jetty to the
southeast (offshore) approximately 1,500 to 4,000 m from source from
the pile driving activities. For vibratory driving, differences in
average SPLs between pile locations (inside versus outside) was
approximately 5 dB rms less for same-sized inside piles, and average
maximum SPLs recorded for the nine individual piles monitored varied
approximately 5 dB rms among all piles with no measurable differences
between pile sizes. For impact driving, 36-in piles produced on average
approximately 5 dB rms louder SPLs than did 30-in piles. Measured zones
for impact driving were smaller for same-sized inside piles due to
increased attenuation in shallower water and increased acoustic
interference from existing piles. Airborne sound level recordings were
collected at 15.2 m and at distances ranging from 93 to 400 m,
following the methodology described above.
Maximum and average hydroacoustic dB rms SPLs for concrete piles
were approximately 6 to 10 dB rms greater than levels reported for
similar piles and methods elsewhere (e.g., Oestman et al., 2009). The
NMAWC project site was relatively shallow at 2-4 m depth, and acoustic
boundary conditions created by construction barges, existing marina
structures, and the narrow width of the channel likely contributed to
variability in acoustic sound level recording results. During the IPP,
measured SPLs for driving of 30- and 36-in steel pipe piles fell
outside of expected levels. SPLs for impact and vibratory driving of
48-in steel pipe piles and were reported to be 195 and 190 dB rms at
source (10 m), respectively (Oestman et al., 2009). Hydroacoustic sound
level recordings collected and analyzed during the IPP for vibratory
and impact pile driving recorded lower than expected values for
vibratory pile driving (approximately 170 dB rms) for both 30- and 36-
in steel pipe piles and greater than expected (approximately 202 dB
rms) values for
[[Page 53038]]
impact pile driving. For further discussion of these results, please
see the Navy's monitoring report.
Table 4--Acoustic Monitoring Results
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average Average Measured distances to relevant zones (dB rms/dB
Number underwater airborne unweighted) (m) \1\
Location Activity Pile type of piles SPL at 10 SPL at 15 ---------------------------------------------------
measured m (dB m
rms) (LZFmax) 120 160 180 190 90 100
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NMAWC......................... Impact.......... 12- and 16-in 58 182 108 n/a 126 13 <10 728 105
concrete.
IPP........................... Vibratory....... 30- and 36-in 9 167 113 \2\ n/a <10 <10 233 71
steel pipe. 3,000
IPP........................... Impact.......... 30-in steel pipe 2 195 ......... n/a \3\ \3\ \3\ 75
2,500 450
IPP........................... Impact.......... 36-in steel pipe 7 200
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Site-specific measured transmission loss values (both underwater and airborne) were used to calculate zone distances. See monitoring report for more
detail.
\2\ The 120-dB disturbance zone was initially modeled to be 6,470 m; however, ambient sound in the vicinity of the project site was measured at
approximately 128 dB rms (see below). This value was used in conjunction with a site-specific propagation model to arrive at a predicted distance of
3,000 m at which sound should attenuate to background levels. This was supported by collection of measured dB rms values for vibratory pile driving
during the IPP, as signal could not be distinguished from background at similar distance.
\3\ These values are for outside piles. Measured distances to the 160/180/190 dB ZOIs for inside piles were 2,000/100/40 m (see above for discussion).
Zones calculated on the basis of SPLs from 36-in piles.
Ambient data collection was conducted in a manner consistent with
NMFS' 2012 guidance for measurement of background sound. Ambient
underwater and airborne sound level recordings were collected for three
eight-hour days at NMAWC between March 20-27, 2014, and for the IPP
from April 24 to May 23, 2014. Ambient sound level recordings were
collected in the absence of construction activities, and during typical
construction time periods (7 a.m. to 4 p.m.), at locations that were
between 400 and 1,000 m from each site. Sites were chosen to minimize
boat traffic effects that might impact results.
Ambient hydroacoustic sound level recordings conducted adjacent to
the fuel pier IPP project site during the week prior to and following
IPP pile driving activities documented daily LZF averages of
approximately 128 dB (see Figure 3-20 of the monitoring report). The
area adjacent to the project site is a high traffic area supporting
Navy fuel operations and is within 500 m of the main San Diego Bay
navigation channel. Spike measurements eclipsed 140 dB with one
instance reaching near 155 dB (Figure 3-20). Values were consistent
with previous measured values and were recorded within expected ranges.
Marine Mammal Monitoring Results--Marine mammal monitoring was
conducted as required under the IHA and as described in the first-year
monitoring plan and in our Federal Register notice of proposed
authorization associated with the first-year IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23,
2013). For a full description of monitoring methodology, please see
section 2.1.3 of the Navy's monitoring report, including Figure 2-1 for
representative monitoring locations. Monitoring protocols were managed
adaptively during the course of the first-year IHA. For example, as the
IPP project progressed, the Navy realized that there were areas that
were within close proximity to pile driving activities that could not
be adequately observed by a single MMO, and a pier-based secondary MMO
was added. As a result, three dock-, pier-, and barge-based MMOs (one
in close proximity to the pile being driven, and two in close proximity
to known haul out locations for seals and sea lions to the north and
south of the pier) were used to provide complete coverage for the
shutdown zones.
Monitoring results are presented in Table 5. The Navy recorded all
observations of marine mammals, including pre- and post-construction
monitoring efforts. Animals observed during these periods or that were
determined to be outside relevant ZOIs were not considered to represent
incidents of take. Please see Figures 3-8, 3-11, 3-22, 3-26, and 3-28
for locations of observations and incidents of take relative to the
project sites. Take authorization for the first-year authorization was
informed by an assumption that 66 days of in-water construction would
occur, whereas only 35 total days actually occurred. However, the
actual observed rates per day were in all cases lower than what was
assumed. Therefore, we expect that the Navy would not have exceeded the
take allowances even if the full 66 days had been reached.
As noted above, an individual California sea lion was observed
within the defined 190-dB shutdown zone. After correcting for animal
location based on distance and bearing relative to the observer, the
distance from the animal to the pile was determined to be approximately
30 m. The barge location on that day may have impacted the observer's
ability to judge distance relative to the pile. Although the sea lion
was sighted relatively close to the shutdown zone, the MMO assumed
that, since it was seen passing the 49 x 12 m barge, it was outside of
the shutdown zone. The animal continued swimming and no behavioral
changes were noted.
[[Page 53039]]
Table 5--Marine Mammal Monitoring Results
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total incidents
Species Location Total sightings Total individuals of Level B take
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California sea lion.............. NMAWC............... 24 25 1
IPP................. 1,061 2,299 387
Harbor seal...................... NMAWC............... 6 6 1
IPP................. 23 25 6
Bottlenose dolphin............... NMAWC............... 1 1 0
IPP................. 34 83 13
Gray whale \1\................... IPP................. 1 1 0
Common dolphin \2\............... IPP................. 3 19 0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ One large cetacean was observed just to the east of the Zuniga Jetty. It could not be positively identified
but was likely a gray whale. See Figure 3-28 of the monitoring report.
\2\ No take was authorized for common dolphins.
Estimated Take by Incidental Harassment
Except with respect to certain activities not pertinent here,
section 3(18) of the MMPA defines ``harassment'' as: ``. . . any act of
pursuit, torment, or annoyance which (i) has the potential to injure a
marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild [Level A harassment];
or (ii) has the potential to disturb a marine mammal or marine mammal
stock in the wild by causing disruption of behavioral patterns,
including, but not limited to, migration, breathing, nursing, breeding,
feeding, or sheltering [Level B harassment].''
All anticipated takes would be by Level B harassment resulting from
vibratory and impact pile driving or pneumatic chipping and involving
temporary changes in behavior. The proposed mitigation and monitoring
measures are expected to minimize the possibility of injurious or
lethal takes such that take by Level A harassment, serious injury, or
mortality is considered discountable. However, it is unlikely that
injurious or lethal takes would occur even in the absence of the
planned mitigation and monitoring measures.
If a marine mammal responds to a stimulus by changing its behavior
(e.g., through relatively minor changes in locomotion direction/speed
or vocalization behavior), the response may or may not constitute
taking at the individual level, and is unlikely to affect the stock or
the species as a whole. However, if a sound source displaces marine
mammals from an important feeding or breeding area for a prolonged
period, impacts on animals or on the stock or species could potentially
be significant (e.g., Lusseau and Bejder, 2007; Weilgart, 2007). Given
the many uncertainties in predicting the quantity and types of impacts
of sound on marine mammals, it is common practice to estimate how many
animals are likely to be present within a particular distance of a
given activity, or exposed to a particular level of sound. This
practice potentially overestimates the numbers of marine mammals taken.
In addition, it is often difficult to distinguish between the
individuals harassed and incidences of harassment. In particular, for
stationary activities, it is more likely that some smaller number of
individuals may accrue a number of incidences of harassment per
individual than for each incidence to accrue to a new individual,
especially if those individuals display some degree of residency or
site fidelity and the impetus to use the site (e.g., because of
foraging opportunities) is stronger than the deterrence presented by
the harassing activity.
The project area is not believed to be particularly important
habitat for marine mammals, nor is it considered an area frequented by
marine mammals (with the exception of California sea lions, which are
attracted to nearby haul-out opportunities). Sightings of other species
are relatively rare. Therefore, behavioral disturbances that could
result from anthropogenic sound associated with these activities are
expected to affect only a relatively small number of individual marine
mammals, although those effects could be recurring over the life of the
project if the same individuals remain in the project vicinity.
The Navy has requested authorization for the potential taking of
small numbers of California sea lions, harbor seals, bottlenose
dolphins, common dolphins, and gray whales in San Diego Bay and nearby
waters that may result from pile driving during construction activities
associated with the fuel pier replacement project described previously
in this document. In order to estimate the potential incidents of take
that may occur incidental to the specified activity, we typically first
estimate the extent of the sound field that may be produced by the
activity and then consider in combination with information about marine
mammal density or abundance in the project area. In this case, we have
acoustic data from project monitoring that provides empirical
information regarding the sound fields likely produced by project
activities. We first provide information on applicable sound thresholds
for determining effects to marine mammals before describing the
measured sound fields, the available marine mammal density or abundance
information, and the method of estimating potential incidents of take.
Sound Thresholds
We use generic sound exposure thresholds to determine when an
activity that produces sound might result in impacts to a marine mammal
such that a take by harassment might occur. To date, no studies have
been conducted that explicitly examine impacts to marine mammals from
pile driving sounds or from which empirical sound thresholds have been
established. These thresholds (Table 6) are used to estimate when
harassment may occur (i.e., when an animal is exposed to levels equal
to or exceeding the relevant criterion) in specific contexts; however,
useful contextual information that may inform our assessment of effects
is typically lacking and we consider these thresholds as step
functions. NMFS is working to revise these acoustic guidelines; for
more information on that process, please visit www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/acoustics/guidelines.htm.
[[Page 53040]]
Table 6--Current Acoustic Exposure Criteria
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Criterion Definition Threshold
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level A harassment Injury (PTS--any 180 dB (cetaceans)/
(underwater). level above that 190 dB (pinnipeds)
which is known (rms).
to cause TTS).
Level B harassment Behavioral 160 dB (impulsive
(underwater). disruption. source)/120 dB
(continuous source)
(rms).
Level B harassment (airborne). Behavioral 90 dB (harbor seals)/
disruption. 100 dB (other
pinnipeds)
(unweighted).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distance to Sound Thresholds
Background information on underwater sound propagation and the
calculation of range to relevant thresholds was provided in our Federal
Register notice of proposed authorization associated with the first-
year IHA (78 FR 30873; May 23, 2013). For the first-year IHA, the Navy
estimated sound fields using a site-specific model for transmission
loss (TL) from pile driving at a central point at the project site in
combination with proxy source levels (as described in the
aforementioned Federal Register notice). The model is based on
historical temperature-salinity data and location-dependent bathymetry.
In the model, TL is the same for different sound source levels and is
applied to each of the different activities to determine the point at
which the applicable thresholds are reached as a function of distance
from the source. The model's predictions result in a slightly lower
average rate of TL than practical spreading, and hence are
conservative. The model has been further validated using acoustic
monitoring data collected under the first-year IHA (see Figure 6-1 of
the Navy's application).
Only impact and vibratory driving of steel pipe piles is planned
for the next phase of work. Demolition activities, including vibratory
pile removal and pneumatic chipping, are also planned but would always
occur concurrently with impact and vibratory driving and the resulting
sound fields would be subsumed by those activities. Acoustic monitoring
results that inform both the take estimates as well as the mitigation
monitoring zones were reported in Table 4. We present the measured
distances again here (Table 7) and compare to the modeled zones used in
estimating potential incidents of take for the first year IHA. See also
Figure 6-2 of the Navy's application for visual representation of these
sound fields and their interaction with local topography. Assumed proxy
source levels for the first-year IHA were 195 dB rms and 180 dB rms for
impact and vibratory driving of steel piles, respectively. Measured
source levels, used to produce the values labeled as ``measured''
below, were 200 dB rms and 170 dB rms for impact and vibratory driving,
respectively. For impact driving, distances to the 160/180/190-dB ZOIs
are 5,484, 452, and 36 m. For vibratory driving, background sound has
been determined to be approximately 128 dB rms. The distance at which
continuous sound produced by vibratory driving would attenuate to
background levels is approximately 3,000 m. For airborne sound, we
assume a single, precautionary zone here that is based on measured
values for impact driving (approximately 110 dB [unweighted]).
Table 7--Predicted Versus Measured Distances to Relevant Thresholds
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distance to threshold in meters
Activity -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
190 dB 180 dB 160 dB 120 dB 100 dB 90 dB
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact driving, steel piles 36 452 5,484 n/a 113 358
(predicted)......................
Impact driving, steel piles 75 450 2,500 n/a 71 233
(measured) \1\...................
Vibratory driving, steel piles <10 14 n/a 6,470 9 28
(predicted)......................
Vibratory driving, steel piles <10 <10 n/a 3,000 n/a n/a
(measured).......................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Note that these values are based on data for bayside piles and will be precautionary for shoreside piles.
See discussion at Table 4.
Airborne Sound
Although sea lions are known to haul-out regularly on man-made
objects in the vicinity of the project site (see Figure 4-1 of the
Navy's application), and harbor seals are occasionally observed hauled
out on rocks along the shoreline in the vicinity of the project site,
none of these are within the ZOIs for airborne sound, and we believe
that incidents of incidental take resulting solely from airborne sound
are unlikely. The zones for sea lions are within the minimum shutdown
zone defined for underwater sound and, although the zones for harbor
seals are larger, they have not been observed to haul out as readily on
man-made structure in the immediate vicinity of the project site. There
is a remote possibility that an animal could surface in-water, but with
head out, within one of the defined zones and thereby be exposed to
levels of airborne sound that we associate with harassment, but any
such occurrence would likely be accounted for in our estimation of
incidental take from underwater sound.
In summary, we generally recognize that pinnipeds occurring within
an estimated airborne harassment zone, whether in the water or hauled
out, could be exposed to airborne sound that may result in behavioral
harassment. However, any animal exposed to airborne sound above the
behavioral harassment threshold is likely to also be exposed to
underwater sound above relevant thresholds (which are typically in all
cases larger zones than those associated with airborne sound). Thus,
the behavioral harassment of these animals is already accounted for in
these estimates of potential take. Multiple incidents of exposure to
sound above NMFS' thresholds for behavioral harassment are not believed
to result in increased behavioral disturbance, in either nature or
intensity of disturbance reaction. Therefore, we do not believe that
authorization of incidental take resulting from airborne sound for
pinnipeds is warranted, and airborne sound is not discussed further
here.
Marine Mammal Densities
For all species, the best scientific information available was
considered for use in the marine mammal take assessment calculations.
Although various regional offshore surveys for marine mammals have been
conducted, it is unlikely that these data would be
[[Page 53041]]
representative of the species or numbers that may be encountered in San
Diego Bay. However, the Navy has conducted a large number of site-
specific marine mammal surveys, from 2007-14 (Merkel and Associates,
2008; Johnson, 2010, 2011; Lerma, 2012, 2014). Whereas analyses for the
previous IHA relied on surveys conducted from 2007-12, continuing
surveys by the Navy have generally indicated increasing abundance of
all species. Accordingly, we use here data from surveys of the project
area that were conducted between September 2012 and April 2014 in order
to provide the most up-to-date estimates for marine mammal abundances
during the period of this proposed IHA. These data are from dedicated
line-transect surveys, or from opportunistic observations for more
rarely observed species (see Figures 3-1 and 3-2 of the Navy's
application). Boat survey transects established within northern San
Diego Bay in 2007 have been resurveyed on 46 occasions, 35 of which
were conducted between September and April. Observational data from the
most recent 22 of these surveys inform this analysis.
In addition, the Navy has developed estimates of marine mammal
densities in waters associated with training and testing areas
(including Hawaii-Southern California) for the Navy Marine Species
Density Database (NMSDD). A technical report (Hanser et al., 2014)
describes methodologies and available information used to derive these
densities, which are based upon the best available information, except
where specific local abundance information is available and applicable
to a specific action area. Density information is shown in Table 8; the
document is publicly available on the Internet at: nwtteis.com/DocumentsandReferences/NWTTDocuments/SupportingTechnicalDocuments.aspx
(accessed August 26, 2014).
Description of Take Calculation
The following assumptions are made when estimating potential
incidences of take:
All marine mammal individuals potentially available are
assumed to be present within the relevant area, and thus incidentally
taken;
An individual can only be taken once during a 24-h period;
There were will be 135 total days of activity;
The maximum ZOI is approximately 5.7 km\2\;
Vibratory and impact driving of steel pipe piles will
occur on each day; and,
Exposures to sound levels at or above the relevant
thresholds equate to take, as defined by the MMPA.
The estimation of marine mammal takes typically uses the following
calculation:
Exposure estimate = (n * ZOI) * days of total activity
where:
n = density estimate used for each species/season
ZOI = sound threshold ZOI area; the area encompassed by all
locations where the SPLs equal or exceed the threshold being
evaluated
n * ZOI produces an estimate of the abundance of animals that could
be present in the area for exposure, and is rounded to the nearest
whole number before multiplying by days of total activity.
The ZOI impact area is estimated using the relevant distances in
Table 7, assuming that sound radiates from a central point in the water
column slightly offshore of the existing pier and taking into
consideration the possible affected area due to topographical
constraints of the action area (i.e., radial distances to thresholds
are not always reached). When local abundance is the best available
information, in lieu of the density-area method described above, we may
simply multiply some number of animals (as determined through counts of
animals hauled-out) by the number of days of activity, under the
assumption that all of those animals will be present and incidentally
taken on each day of activity.
Where appropriate, we use average daily number of individuals
observed within the project area (defined as the 120-dB ZOI for
potential behavioral disturbance by vibratory pile driving calculated
without consideration for background sound levels) during Navy marine
mammal surveys, corrected to allow for a five percent contingency. It
is the opinion of the professional biologists who conducted these
surveys that detectability of animals during these surveys, at slow
speeds and under calm weather and excellent viewing conditions,
approached one hundred percent. However, to account for the possibility
that some parts of the study area may not have been covered due to
access limitations, and to allow for variation in the accuracy of
counts of large numbers of animals, a 95 percent detection rate is
assumed (equivalent to five percent precautionary contingency
allowance).
There are a number of reasons why estimates of potential incidents
of take may be conservative, assuming that available density or
abundance estimates and estimated ZOI areas are accurate (aside from
the contingency correction discussed above). We assume, in the absence
of information supporting a more refined conclusion, that the output of
the calculation represents the number of individuals that may be taken
by the specified activity. In fact, in the context of stationary
activities such as pile driving and in areas where resident animals may
be present, this number more realistically represents the number of
incidents of take that may accrue to a smaller number of individuals.
While pile driving can occur any day throughout the period of validity,
and the analysis is conducted on a per day basis, only a fraction of
that time (typically a matter of hours on any given day) is actually
spent pile driving. The potential effectiveness of mitigation measures
in reducing the number of takes is typically not quantified in the take
estimation process. For these reasons, these take estimates may be
conservative. See Table 8 for total estimated incidents of take.
California Sea Lion
The NMSDD reports estimated densities for north and central San
Diego Bay of 5.8 animals/km\2\ for the summer and fall periods and 2.5
animals/km\2\ during the winter and spring (based on surveys conducted
2007-11). For the first-year IHA, the Navy reported an average
abundance of approximately sixty individuals per survey day
(approximately equating to the reported density). However, when
considering only more recent Navy vessel-based surveys (22 surveys
between September 2012 and April 2014), an average of 175 individuals
(adjusted for 95 percent detection as described above) has been
observed within the maximum ZOI for the project during the seasonal
period of in-water construction. This includes both hauled-out and
swimming individuals. For California sea lions, the most common species
in northern San Diego Bay and the only species with regular occurrence
in the project area, we determined that this value--derived from more
recent site-specific surveys--would be most appropriate for use in
estimating potential incidences of take.
Harbor Seal
Harbor seals are relatively uncommon within San Diego Bay.
Previously, sightings in the Navy transect surveys of northern San
Diego Bay were limited to individuals outside of the ZOI, on the south
side of Ballast Point. These individuals had not been observed entering
or transiting the project area and were believed to move from this
[[Page 53042]]
location to haul-outs further north at La Jolla. Separately, marine
mammal monitoring conducted by the Navy intermittently from 2010-14 had
documented up to four harbor seals near Pier 122 (within the ZOI) at
various times, with the greatest number of sightings during April and
May. This information was used in the previous IHA analysis, wherein we
assumed that three harbor seals could be present for up to thirty days
of the project. However, more recent data from Navy transect surveys
(September 2012 through April 2014) indicate an average abundance of
6.17 within the maximum project ZOI (adjusted for 95 percent detection
to an average of seven individuals). Animals were seen swimming as well
as hauled out on rocks along the shoreline of NBPL. Although it is
unknown whether this increase in abundance is a temporary phenomenon we
use this new information on a precautionary basis as the best available
information, and assume that this number of animals could be present on
any day of the project. The NMSDD provides a maximum density estimate
of 0.02 animals/km\2\ for southern California, but recent, site-
specific information indicates that harbor seals are more common within
the northern San Diego Bay project area than this density would
suggest.
Gray Whale
The NMSDD provides a density of 0.1 animals/km\2\ for southern
California waters from shore to 5 nm west of the Channel Islands
(winter/spring only; density assumed to be zero during summer/fall), a
value initially reported by Carretta et al. (2000) for gray whales
around San Clemente Island in the Southern California Bight. Gray
whales were seen only from January-April. In the project area,
observational data for gray whales is limited and their occurrence
considered infrequent and unpredictable. On the basis of limited
information--in recent years, solitary individuals have entered the bay
and remained for varying lengths of time in 2009, 2010, 2011, and 2014,
and whales more regularly transit briefly past the mouth of San Diego
Bay--we assume here that the NMSDD density may be applicable throughout
the migration period (December-April), while acknowledging that it
likely represents a precautionary estimate for waters within the Bay as
opposed to those outside the mouth of the bay that whales are more
likely to transit through. In order to determine how many of the
maximum 135 days of in-water pile driving work it is appropriate to
assume the potential for gray whale presence, we consider in-water work
days (five days per week) that overlap the main part of the migration
season (approximately eighteen weeks), for a total of ninety days.
Incidental harassment of gray whales could result from some combination
of individuals briefly transiting near the mouth of the Bay and from
individuals entering the bay and lingering in the project area.
Bottlenose Dolphin
Coastal bottlenose dolphins can occur at any time of year in San
Diego Bay. Numbers sighted during Navy transect surveys have been
highly variable, ranging from zero to forty individuals (observed
dolphins are assumed to have been of the coastal stock). An uncorrected
average of 2.1 bottlenose dolphins was observed during recent Navy
surveys (September 2012 through April 2014), although nineteen animals
were observed in a single survey. As reported in the NMSDD, Dudzik et
al. (2006) provide a uniform density for California coastal dolphins of
0.4 animals/km\2\ within 1 km of the coast from Baja to San Francisco
in all four seasons. However, given the sporadic nature of bottlenose
dolphin sightings (i.e., limited data) and the high variability
observed in terms of numbers and locations, we believe it appropriate
to take a precautionary approach to take estimation for bottlenose
dolphins and assume that as many as three dolphins could occur per day
of activity. We believe that this increase from the observed abundance
is necessary and sufficient to account for the uncertainty described
above.
Common Dolphin
Common dolphins are present in the coastal waters outside of San
Diego Bay, but have been observed in the bay only infrequently and were
never seen during the Navy's surveys. However, the previously described
observations of common dolphins in the project area during the IPP in
2014 prompted their inclusion in this proposed IHA. There have not been
enough sightings of common dolphins in San Diego Bay to develop a
reliable estimate specific to the project area. Sightings of long-
beaked common dolphins are predominantly near shore, and have been
documented during Navy training exercises just offshore and to the
south of San Diego Bay, whereas those of short-beaked common dolphins
extend throughout the coastal and offshore waters. The NMSDD provides
an all-season density estimate of 0.1 animals/km\2\ for the long-beaked
common dolphin within southern California waters (derived from Ferguson
and Barlow [2003] and Barlow and Forney [2007]). Because short-beaked
common dolphins are less common in nearshore waters than are long-
beaked, and are expected to be less likely to occur in the project
area, we assign the value for long-beaked common dolphins to all common
dolphins that may occur in the project area. However, use of this
density value would result in an assumption that no common dolphins
would be incidentally taken by project activities. We believe it
appropriate to take a precautionary approach and, on the basis of the
common dolphin observations from previous project monitoring (i.e.,
three observations with average group size of six), assume that a group
of six dolphins could potentially be present on each day of activity.
These incidents of take could be of either long-beaked or short-beaked
common dolphins.
Table 8--Calculations for Incidental Take Estimation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total proposed authorized takes \3\ (% of
Species Abundance \1\ total stock)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California sea lion..................... 175 23,625 (8.0)
Harbor seal............................. 7 945 (3.1)
Bottlenose dolphin...................... 3 405 (81.0) \4\
Common dolphin.......................... 6 810 (0.8 [LB]/0.2 [SB]) \5\
Gray whale.............................. \2\ 1 90 (0.5)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Best available species- and season-specific density estimate were described above. With the exception of the
gray whale (see footnote 2 below), we have determined that in all cases a site-specific abundance estimate is
the most appropriate information to use in estimating take. See discussions above.
\2\ Product of density (0.115 animals/km\2\) and largest ZOI (5.7 km\2\) rounded to nearest whole number.
[[Page 53043]]
\3\ Best abundance numbers multiplied by expected days of activity (135) to produce take estimate. Calculation
for gray whale assumes ninety days rather than 135; see discussion above.
\4\ Total stock assumed to be 500 for purposes of calculation. See Table 3.
\5\ LB = long-beaked; SB = short-beaked.
Analyses and Preliminary Determinations
Negligible Impact Analysis
NMFS has defined ``negligible impact'' in 50 CFR 216.103 as ``. . .
an impact resulting from the specified activity that cannot be
reasonably expected to, and is not reasonably likely to, adversely
affect the species or stock through effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival.'' A negligible impact finding is based on the
lack of likely adverse effects on annual rates of recruitment or
survival (i.e., population-level effects). An estimate of the number of
Level B harassment takes alone is not enough information on which to
base an impact determination. In addition to considering estimates of
the number of marine mammals that might be ``taken'' through behavioral
harassment, we consider other factors, such as the likely nature of any
responses (e.g., intensity, duration), the context of any responses
(e.g., critical reproductive time or location, migration), as well as
the number and nature of estimated Level A harassment takes, the number
of estimated mortalities, and effects on habitat.
Pile driving activities associated with the pier replacement
project, as outlined previously, have the potential to disturb or
displace marine mammals. Specifically, the specified activities may
result in take, in the form of Level B harassment (behavioral
disturbance) only, from underwater sounds generated from pile driving.
Potential takes could occur if individuals of these species are present
in the ensonified zone when pile driving is happening.
No injury, serious injury, or mortality is anticipated given the
nature of the activity and measures designed to minimize the
possibility of injury to marine mammals. The potential for these
outcomes is minimized through the construction method and the
implementation of the planned mitigation measures. Specifically,
vibratory hammers will be the primary method of installation, and this
activity does not have significant potential to cause injury to marine
mammals due to the relatively low source levels produced (site-specific
acoustic monitoring data show no source level measurements above 180 dB
rms) and the lack of potentially injurious source characteristics.
Impact pile driving produces short, sharp pulses with higher peak
levels and much sharper rise time to reach those peaks. When impact
driving is necessary, required measures (implementation of shutdown
zones) significantly reduce any possibility of injury. Given sufficient
``notice'' through use of soft start (for impact driving), marine
mammals are expected to move away from a sound source that is annoying
prior to its becoming potentially injurious. The likelihood that marine
mammal detection ability by trained observers is high under the
environmental conditions described for San Diego Bay (approaching one
hundred percent detection rate, as described by trained biologists
conducting site-specific surveys) further enables the implementation of
shutdowns to avoid injury, serious injury, or mortality.
Effects on individuals that are taken by Level B harassment, on the
basis of reports in the literature as well as monitoring from other
similar activities, will likely be limited to reactions such as
increased swimming speeds, increased surfacing time, or decreased
foraging (if such activity were occurring) (e.g., Thorson and Reyff,
2006; HDR, 2012; Lerma, 2014). Most likely, individuals will simply
move away from the sound source and be temporarily displaced from the
areas of pile driving, although even this reaction has been observed
primarily only in association with impact pile driving. In response to
vibratory driving, pinnipeds (which may become somewhat habituated to
human activity in industrial or urban waterways) have been observed to
orient towards and sometimes move towards the sound. The pile driving
activities analyzed here are similar to, or less impactful than,
numerous other construction activities conducted in San Francisco Bay
and in the Puget Sound region, which have taken place with no reported
injuries or mortality to marine mammals, and no known long-term adverse
consequences from behavioral harassment. Repeated exposures of
individuals to levels of sound that may cause Level B harassment are
unlikely to result in hearing impairment or to significantly disrupt
foraging behavior. Thus, even repeated Level B harassment of some small
subset of the overall stock is unlikely to result in any significant
realized decrease in fitness for the affected individuals, and thus
would not result in any adverse impact to the stock as a whole. Level B
harassment will be reduced to the level of least practicable impact
through use of mitigation measures described herein and, if sound
produced by project activities is sufficiently disturbing, animals are
likely to simply avoid the project area while the activity is
occurring.
In summary, this negligible impact analysis is founded on the
following factors: (1) The possibility of injury, serious injury, or
mortality may reasonably be considered discountable; (2) the
anticipated incidents of Level B harassment consist of, at worst,
temporary modifications in behavior; (3) the absence of any significant
habitat within the project area, including rookeries, significant haul-
outs, or known areas or features of special significance for foraging
or reproduction; (4) the presumed efficacy of the proposed mitigation
measures in reducing the effects of the specified activity to the level
of least practicable impact. In addition, these stocks are not listed
under the ESA or considered depleted under the MMPA. In combination, we
believe that these factors, as well as the available body of evidence
from other similar activities, demonstrate that the potential effects
of the specified activity will have only short-term effects on
individuals. The specified activity is not expected to impact rates of
recruitment or survival and will therefore not result in population-
level impacts. Based on the analysis contained herein of the likely
effects of the specified activity on marine mammals and their habitat,
and taking into consideration the implementation of the proposed
monitoring and mitigation measures, we preliminarily find that the
total marine mammal take from Navy's pier replacement activities will
have a negligible impact on the affected marine mammal species or
stocks.
Small Numbers Analysis
The number of incidents of take proposed for authorization for
these stocks, with the exception of the coastal bottlenose dolphin (see
below), would be considered small relative to the relevant stocks or
populations (see Table 8) even if each estimated taking occurred to a
new individual. This is an extremely unlikely scenario as, for
pinnipeds occurring at the NBPL waterfront, there will almost certainly
be some overlap in individuals present day-to-day and in general, there
is likely
[[Page 53044]]
to be some overlap in individuals present day-to-day for animals in
estuarine/inland waters.
The proposed numbers of authorized take for bottlenose dolphins are
higher relative to the total stock abundance estimate and would not
represent small numbers if a significant portion of the take was for a
new individual. However, these numbers represent the estimated
incidents of take, not the number of individuals taken. That is, it is
likely that a relatively small subset of California coastal bottlenose
dolphins would be incidentally harassed by project activities.
California coastal bottlenose dolphins range from San Francisco Bay to
San Diego (and south into Mexico) and the specified activity would be
stationary within an enclosed water body that is not recognized as an
area of any special significance for coastal bottlenose dolphins (and
is therefore not an area of dolphin aggregation, as evident in Navy
observational records). We therefore believe that the estimated numbers
of takes, were they to occur, likely represent repeated exposures of a
much smaller number of bottlenose dolphins and that, based on the
limited region of exposure in comparison with the known distribution of
the coastal bottlenose dolphin, these estimated incidents of take
represent small numbers of bottlenose dolphins.
Based on the analysis contained herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the mitigation and monitoring
measures, we preliminarily find that small numbers of marine mammals
will be taken relative to the populations of the affected species or
stocks.
Impact on Availability of Affected Species for Taking for Subsistence
Uses
There are no relevant subsistence uses of marine mammals implicated
by this action. Therefore, we have determined that the total taking of
affected species or stocks would not have an unmitigable adverse impact
on the availability of such species or stocks for taking for
subsistence purposes.
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
The Navy initiated informal consultation under section 7 of the ESA
with NMFS Southwest Regional Office (now West Coast Regional Office) on
March 5, 2013. NMFS concluded on May 16, 2013, that the proposed action
may affect, but is not likely to adversely affect, WNP gray whales. The
Navy has not requested authorization of the incidental take of WNP gray
whales and no such authorization is proposed, and there are no other
ESA-listed marine mammals found in the action area. Therefore, no
consultation under the ESA is required.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
In compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), as implemented by the regulations published
by the Council on Environmental Quality (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), the
Navy prepared an Environmental Assessment (EA) to consider the direct,
indirect and cumulative effects to the human environment resulting from
the pier replacement project. NMFS made the Navy's EA available to the
public for review and comment, in relation to its suitability for
adoption by NMFS in order to assess the impacts to the human
environment of issuance of an IHA to the Navy. Also in compliance with
NEPA and the CEQ regulations, as well as NOAA Administrative Order 216-
6, NMFS has reviewed the Navy's EA, determined it to be sufficient, and
adopted that EA and signed a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI)
on July 8, 2013.
We have reviewed the Navy's application for a renewed IHA for
ongoing construction activities for 2014-15 and the 2013-14 monitoring
report. Based on that review, we have determined that the proposed
action is very similar to that considered in the previous IHA. In
addition, no significant new circumstances or information relevant to
environmental concerns have been identified. Thus, we have determined
preliminarily that the preparation of a new or supplemental NEPA
document is not necessary, and will, after review of public comments
determine whether or not to reaffirm our 2013 FONSI. The 2013 NEPA
documents are available for review at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental.htm.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary determinations, we propose to
issue an IHA to the Navy for conducting the described pier replacement
activities in San Diego Bay, for a period of one year from the date of
issuance, provided the previously mentioned mitigation, monitoring, and
reporting requirements are incorporated. The proposed IHA language is
provided next.
This section contains a draft of the IHA itself. The wording
contained in this section is proposed for inclusion in the IHA (if
issued).
1. This Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) is valid for a
period of one year from the date of issuance.
2. This IHA is valid only for pile driving and removal activities
associated with the fuel pier replacement project in San Diego Bay,
California.
3. General Conditions
(a) A copy of this IHA must be in the possession of the Navy, its
designees, and work crew personnel operating under the authority of
this IHA.
(b) The species authorized for taking are the harbor seal (Phoca
vitulina richardii), California sea lion (Zalophus californianus),
bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus truncatus), common dolphin
(Delphinus sp.), and gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus).
(c) The taking, by Level B harassment only, is limited to the
species listed in condition 3(b). See Table 1 (attached) for numbers of
take authorized.
(d) The taking by injury (Level A harassment), serious injury, or
death of any of the species listed in condition 3(b) of the
Authorization or any taking of any other species of marine mammal is
prohibited and may result in the modification, suspension, or
revocation of this IHA.
(e) The Navy shall conduct briefings between construction
supervisors and crews, marine mammal monitoring team, acoustic
monitoring team, and Navy staff prior to the start of all pile driving
activity, and when new personnel join the work, in order to explain
responsibilities, communication procedures, marine mammal monitoring
protocol, and operational procedures.
4. Mitigation Measures
The holder of this Authorization is required to implement the
following mitigation measures:
(a) For all pile driving, the Navy shall implement a minimum
shutdown zone of 10 m radius around the pile. If a marine mammal comes
within or approaches the shutdown zone, such operations shall cease.
See Table 2 (attached) for minimum radial distances required for
shutdown zones.
(b) The Navy shall similarly avoid direct interaction with marine
mammals during in-water heavy machinery work other than pile driving
that may occur in association with the specified activities. If a
marine mammal comes within 10 m of such activity, operations shall
cease and vessels shall reduce speed to the minimum level required to
maintain steerage and safe working conditions, as appropriate.
(c) The Navy shall establish monitoring locations as described
below. Please also refer to the Acoustic
[[Page 53045]]
and Marine Species Monitoring Plan (Monitoring Plan; attached).
i. For all pile driving activities, a minimum of one observer shall
be stationed at the active pile driving rig in order to monitor the
shutdown zones.
ii. For all pile driving activities, at least three additional
vessel-based observers shall be positioned for optimal monitoring of
the surrounding waters. During impact driving of steel piles, one of
these shall be stationed for optimal monitoring of the cetacean Level A
injury zone (see Table 2), while two of these may be positioned at the
discretion of the Navy for optimal fulfillment of both acoustic
monitoring objectives and monitoring of the Level B harassment zone.
During all other pile driving, all three vessel-based observers may be
positioned at the discretion of the Navy for optimal fulfillment of
both acoustic monitoring objectives and monitoring of the Level B
harassment zone.
iii. For all impact pile driving activities, a minimum of one
shore-based observer shall be located at the pier work site.
iv. These observers shall record all observations of marine
mammals, regardless of distance from the pile being driven, as well as
behavior and potential behavioral reactions of the animals. Photographs
must be taken of any observed gray whales.
v. All observers shall be equipped for communication of marine
mammal observations amongst themselves and to other relevant personnel
(e.g., those necessary to effect activity delay or shutdown).
(d) Monitoring shall take place from fifteen minutes prior to
initiation of pile driving activity through thirty minutes post-
completion of pile driving activity. Pre-activity monitoring shall be
conducted for fifteen minutes to ensure that the shutdown zone is clear
of marine mammals, and pile driving may commence when observers have
declared the shutdown zone clear of marine mammals. In the event of a
delay or shutdown of activity resulting from marine mammals in the
shutdown zone, animals shall be allowed to remain in the shutdown zone
(i.e., must leave of their own volition) and their behavior shall be
monitored and documented. Monitoring shall occur throughout the time
required to drive a pile. The shutdown zone must be determined to be
clear during periods of good visibility (i.e., the entire shutdown zone
and surrounding waters must be visible to the naked eye).
(e) If a marine mammal approaches or enters the shutdown zone, all
pile driving activities at that location shall be halted. If pile
driving is halted or delayed due to the presence of a marine mammal,
the activity may not commence or resume until either the animal has
voluntarily left and been visually confirmed beyond the shutdown zone
or fifteen minutes have passed without re-detection of the animal.
(f) Monitoring shall be conducted by qualified observers, as
described in the Monitoring Plan. Trained observers shall be placed
from the best vantage point(s) practicable to monitor for marine
mammals and implement shutdown or delay procedures when applicable
through communication with the equipment operator.
(g) The Navy shall use soft start techniques recommended by NMFS
for vibratory and impact pile driving. Soft start for vibratory drivers
requires contractors to initiate sound for fifteen seconds at reduced
energy followed by a thirty-second waiting period. This procedure is
repeated two additional times. Soft start for impact drivers requires
contractors to provide an initial set of strikes at reduced energy,
followed by a thirty-second waiting period, then two subsequent reduced
energy strike sets. Soft start shall be implemented at the start of
each day's pile driving and at any time following cessation of pile
driving for a period of thirty minutes or longer. Soft start for impact
drivers must be implemented at any time following cessation of impact
driving for a period of thirty minutes or longer.
(h) Pile driving shall only be conducted during daylight hours.
5. Monitoring
The holder of this Authorization is required to conduct marine
mammal monitoring during pile driving activity. Marine mammal
monitoring and reporting shall be conducted in accordance with the
Monitoring Plan.
(a) The Navy shall collect sighting data and behavioral responses
to pile driving for marine mammal species observed in the region of
activity during the period of activity. All observers shall be trained
in marine mammal identification and behaviors, and shall have no other
construction-related tasks while conducting monitoring.
(b) For all marine mammal monitoring, the information shall be
recorded as described in the Monitoring Plan.
(c) The Navy shall conduct acoustic monitoring for representative
scenarios of pile driving activity, as described in the Monitoring
Plan.
6. Reporting
The holder of this Authorization is required to:
(a) Submit a draft report on all monitoring conducted under the IHA
within 45 calendar days of the completion of marine mammal and acoustic
monitoring, or sixty days prior to the issuance of any subsequent IHA
for this project, whichever comes first. A final report shall be
prepared and submitted within thirty days following resolution of
comments on the draft report from NMFS. This report must contain the
informational elements described in the Monitoring Plan, at minimum
(see attached), and shall also include:
i. Detailed information about any implementation of shutdowns,
including the distance of animals to the pile and description of
specific actions that ensued and resulting behavior of the animal, if
any.
ii. Description of attempts to distinguish between the number of
individual animals taken and the number of incidences of take, such as
ability to track groups or individuals.
iii. Results of acoustic monitoring, including the information
described in the Monitoring Plan.
(b) Reporting injured or dead marine mammals:
i. In the unanticipated event that the specified activity clearly
causes the take of a marine mammal in a manner prohibited by this IHA,
such as an injury (Level A harassment), serious injury, or mortality,
Navy shall immediately cease the specified activities and report the
incident to the Office of Protected Resources (301-427-8425), NMFS, and
the West Coast Regional Stranding Coordinator (206-526-6550), NMFS. The
report must include the following information:
A. Time and date of the incident;
B. Description of the incident;
C. Environmental conditions (e.g., wind speed and direction,
Beaufort sea state, cloud cover, and visibility);
D. Description of all marine mammal observations in the 24 hours
preceding the incident;
E. Species identification or description of the animal(s) involved;
F. Fate of the animal(s); and
G. Photographs or video footage of the animal(s).
Activities shall not resume until NMFS is able to review the
circumstances of the prohibited take. NMFS will work with Navy to
determine what measures are necessary to minimize the likelihood of
further prohibited take and ensure MMPA compliance. Navy may not resume
their activities until notified by NMFS.
i. In the event that Navy discovers an injured or dead marine
mammal, and the lead observer determines that the
[[Page 53046]]
cause of the injury or death is unknown and the death is relatively
recent (e.g., in less than a moderate state of decomposition), Navy
shall immediately report the incident to the Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, and the West Coast Regional Stranding Coordinator,
NMFS.
The report must include the same information identified in 6(b)(i)
of this IHA. Activities may continue while NMFS reviews the
circumstances of the incident. NMFS will work with Navy to determine
whether additional mitigation measures or modifications to the
activities are appropriate.
ii. In the event that Navy discovers an injured or dead marine
mammal, and the lead observer determines that the injury or death is
not associated with or related to the activities authorized in the IHA
(e.g., previously wounded animal, carcass with moderate to advanced
decomposition, scavenger damage), Navy shall report the incident to the
Office of Protected Resources, NMFS, and the West Coast Regional
Stranding Coordinator, NMFS, within 24 hours of the discovery. Navy
shall provide photographs or video footage or other documentation of
the stranded animal sighting to NMFS.
7. This Authorization may be modified, suspended or withdrawn if
the holder fails to abide by the conditions prescribed herein, or if
the authorized taking is having more than a negligible impact on the
species or stock of affected marine mammals.
Request for Public Comments
We request comment on our analysis, the draft authorization, and
any other aspect of this Notice of Proposed IHA for Navy's pier
replacement activities. Please include with your comments any
supporting data or literature citations to help inform our final
decision on Navy's request for an MMPA authorization.
Dated: August 29, 2014.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
[FR Doc. 2014-21140 Filed 9-4-14; 8:45 am]
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