Endangered and Threatened Species; Designation of Critical Habitat for the Arctic Ringed Seal, 71714-71729 [2014-28229]
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SUMMARY:
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 226
[Docket No. 120912447–4278–01]
RIN 0648–BC56
Endangered and Threatened Species;
Designation of Critical Habitat for the
Arctic Ringed Seal
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
AGENCY:
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Proposed rule; request for
comments.
ACTION:
We, NMFS, propose to
designate critical habitat for the Arctic
subspecies (Phoca hispida hispida) of
the ringed seal (Phoca hispida) under
the Endangered Species Act (ESA). We
propose to designate one specific area of
marine habitat in the northern Bering,
Chukchi, and Beaufort seas. We are
soliciting comments from the public on
all aspects of the proposal, including
our identification and consideration of
the economic, national security, and
other relevant impacts of the proposed
designation.
DATES: Comments on this proposed rule
must be received by March 3, 2015.
Four public hearings on the proposed
rule will be held in Alaska (Anchorage,
Barrow, Kotzebue, and Nome). The
dates and times of these hearings will be
provided in a subsequent Federal
Register notice.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this document, identified by FDMS
Docket Number NOAA–NMFS–2013–
0114, by any one of the following
methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
https://www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20130114, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Address written comments to
Jon Kurland, Assistant Regional
Administrator for Protected Resources,
Alaska Region NMFS, Attn: Ellen
Sebastian. Mail comments to P.O. Box
21668, Juneau, AK 99802–1668.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on https://www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publicly accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/
A’’ in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous). Attachments to
electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF
file formats only.
Electronic copies of the proposed
rule, list of references and supporting
documents, and the draft economic
report (i.e., Regulatory Impact Review
(RIR)/4(b)(2) Preparatory Assessment/
SUMMARY:
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Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act (IRFA)
report) prepared for this action are
available from https://
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20130114 or from the NMFS Alaska Region
Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tamara Olson, NMFS Alaska Region,
(907) 271–5006; Jon Kurland, NMFS
Alaska Region, (907) 586–7638; or Marta
Nammack, NMFS Office of Protected
Resources, (301) 427–8469.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On December 28, 2012, we published
a final rule to list the Arctic ringed seal
as threatened under the ESA (77 FR
76706). Section 4(b)(6)(C) of the ESA
requires the Secretary of Commerce
(Secretary) to designate critical habitat
concurrently with making a
determination to list a species as
threatened or endangered unless it is
not determinable at that time, in which
case the Secretary may extend the
deadline for this designation by 1 year.
At the time of listing, we announced our
intention to designate critical habitat for
the Arctic ringed seal in separate
rulemaking, as sufficient information
was not available to: (1) Identify and
describe the physical and biological
features essential to the conservation of
the Arctic ringed seal; and (2) assess the
economic consequences of designating
critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal.
At that time, we also solicited
comments related to identification of
critical habitat during a 60-day
comment period. We received nine
comment submissions in response to
this solicitation. Subsequently we
researched, reviewed, and compiled the
best available scientific and commercial
data available, including the public
comments received to date, to develop
a critical habitat proposal for the Arctic
ringed seal. We used these data to
identify the physical and biological
features essential to the conservation of
the Arctic ringed seal, specific areas that
we are proposing as critical habitat for
the Arctic ringed seal, and the impacts
associated with the proposed
designation.
This proposed rule would designate
critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal
pursuant to section 4(b)(2) of the ESA.
Critical habitat is defined by section 3
of the ESA as: ‘‘(i) The specific areas
within the geographical area occupied
by the species, at the time it is listed
. . ., on which are found those physical
or biological features (I) essential to the
conservation of the species and (II)
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which may require special management
considerations or protection; and (ii)
specific areas outside the geographical
area occupied by the species at the time
it is listed . . . upon a determination by
the Secretary that such areas are
essential for the conservation of the
species.’’ Section 3 of the ESA (16
U.S.C. 1532(3)) also defines the terms
‘‘conserve,’’ ‘‘conserving,’’ and
‘‘conservation’’ to mean: ‘‘to use, and
the use of, all methods and procedures
that are necessary to bring any
endangered species or threatened
species to the point at which the
measures provided pursuant to this
chapter are no longer necessary.’’
Critical habitat cannot be designated in
areas outside U.S. jurisdiction (50 CFR
424.12(h)).
Section 4(b)(2) of the ESA and our
implementing regulations require that,
before designating critical habitat, we
consider the economic, national
security, and other relevant impacts of
the designation. The Secretary has
discretion to exclude any particular area
from the critical habitat if she
determines that the benefits of exclusion
outweigh the benefits of designation.
The Secretary, however, may not
exclude a particular area if the failure to
designate that area as critical habitat
would result in the extinction of the
species.
Once critical habitat is designated,
section 7(a)(2) of the ESA requires
Federal agencies to ensure they do not
fund, authorize, or carry out any actions
that will destroy or adversely modify
that habitat. This requirement is
additional to the section 7 requirement
that Federal agencies ensure their
actions do not jeopardize the continued
existence of listed species.
This proposed rule describes
information on Arctic ringed seal
biology, distribution, and habitat use,
the methods used to develop the
proposed designation, and our proposal
to designate critical habitat for the
Arctic ringed seal.
Arctic Ringed Seal Biology and Habitat
Use
The following discussion of the
natural history and ecology of Arctic
ringed seals as it relates to habitat use
is based on the best scientific and
commercial data available, including
information in the status review report
for the ringed seal (Kelly et al., 2010a).
In this proposed rule, we focus on those
aspects directly relevant to the
designation of critical habitat for the
Arctic ringed seal. For more detailed
information on the biology and habitat
use of ringed seals, refer to the status
review report and the proposed and
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final listing rules (75 FR 77476,
December 10, 2010; 77 FR 76706,
December 28, 2012).
The Arctic ringed seal is the smallest
of the northern seals, with typical adult
body size of 1.5 m in length and 70 kg
in weight. Arctic ringed seal females
generally reach sexual maturity at 3 to
6 years of age, and males at 5 to 7 years
of age, but with geographic and
temporal variability depending on
animal condition and population
structure. The average life span of Arctic
ringed seals is about 15 to 28 years.
Seasonal Distribution and Habitat Use
Arctic ringed seals are circumpolar
and are found throughout ice-covered
waters of the Arctic Basin and
southward into adjacent seas, including
the Bering and Labrador seas. In the
United States, ringed seals occur in the
Beaufort, Chukchi, and Bering seas off
Alaska’s coast, as far south as Bristol
Bay in years of extensive ice coverage
(King, 1964; Frost and Lowry, 1981;
Frost, 1985; Kelly, 1988; Rice, 1998).
Ringed seals are adapted to remaining
in heavily ice-covered areas throughout
the fall, winter, and spring by using the
stout claws on their foreflippers to
maintain breathing holes in the ice.
Arctic ringed seals do not normally
come ashore, but instead use sea ice as
a substrate for resting, whelping
(birthing), nursing, and molting
(shedding and regrowing hair and outer
skin layers). The seasonality of ice cover
strongly influences Arctic ringed seal
movements, foraging, reproductive
behavior, and vulnerability to predation.
Kelly et al. (2010b) referred to three time
periods important to Arctic ringed seal
seasonal movements and habitat use:
The winter through early spring
‘‘subnivean period’’ when the seals rest
primarily in subnivean lairs (snow caves
on top of the ice); the late spring to early
summer ‘‘basking period’’ between
abandonment of the lairs and melting of
the seasonal sea ice when the seals
undergo their annual molt; and the
open-water ‘‘foraging period’’ when
feeding occurs most intensively during
late summer through fall.
Subnivean Period: With the advance
of winter, many Arctic ringed seals that
summer in the Beaufort and Chukchi
seas are thought to move generally west
and south with the advancing ice, while
others remain in the Beaufort Sea (Frost,
1985). Adult movements during the
subnivean period have been reported as
typically limited, especially where ice
cover is extensive, likely due to
maintenance of breathing holes and
social behavior during the breeding
season (Kelly and Quakenbush, 1990;
Kelly et al., 2010b; Crawford et al.,
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2012). In contrast, subadult Arctic
ringed seals have been observed to
travel relatively long distances in winter
to near the ice edge in the Bering Sea
(Crawford et al., 2012).
At freeze up in the fall, ringed seals
surface to breathe in the remaining open
water of cracks and leads. As these
openings in the ice freeze over, the seals
push through the ice to breathe until it
is too thick (Lukin and Potelov, 1978).
They then open breathing holes by
abrading the ice with the claws on their
foreflippers (Bailey and Hendee, 1926;
Smith and Stirling, 1975). As the ice
thickens, the seals continue to maintain
the breathing holes by scratching at the
walls. As snow accumulates and buries
the breathing hole, the seals breathe
through the snow layer. Ringed seals
excavate lairs in the snow above
breathing holes where snow depth is
sufficient (Chapskii, 1940; McLaren,
1958; Smith and Stirling, 1975). These
subnivean lairs are occupied for resting,
whelping, and nursing young in areas of
annual landfast (shorefast) ice
(McLaren, 1958; Burns, 1970) and stable
pack ice (Finley et al., 1983; Wiig et al.,
1999; Bengtson et al., 2005) that has
undergone a low to moderate amount of
deformation and where pressure ridges
or ice hummocks have caused snow to
form drifts of sufficient depth (Smith
and Stirling, 1975; Lydersen and Gjertz,
1986; Kelly, 1988; Furgal et al., 1996;
Lydersen, 1998).
Females give birth to a single pup in
their lairs during mid-March through
April (Kelly et al., 2010a) and the pups
are nursed in the lairs for an average of
39 days (Hammill et al., 1991). Females
continue to forage throughout lactation
while making frequent visits to birth
lairs (Hammill, 1987; Kelly and
Wartzok, 1996; Simpkins et al., 2001).
The pups develop foraging skills prior
to weaning (Lydersen and Hammill,
1993), and are normally weaned before
break-up of spring ice.
Lairs provide protection from cold
and predators throughout the winter
months, but they are especially
important for protecting newborn ringed
seals. Lairs conceal ringed seals from
predators, an advantage especially
important to the small pups that start
life with minimal tolerance for
immersion in cold water (Smith et al.,
1991). Polar bears prey heavily on
ringed seals. Other predators include
Arctic foxes, common ravens, and
glaucous gulls. Pups in lairs with thin
snow cover are more vulnerable to polar
bear predation than pups in lairs with
thick snow cover (Hammill and Smith,
1989; Ferguson et al., 2005). For
example, Hammill and Smith (1991)
noted that polar bear predation on
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ringed seal pups increased 4-fold in a
year when average snow depths in their
study area decreased from 23 to 10 cm.
When ringed seal pups are forced out of
subnivean lairs prematurely because of
low snow accumulation and/or early
melts, gulls and ravens can also
successfully prey on them (Kumlien,
1879; Gjertz and Lydersen, 1983;
Lydersen and Gjertz, 1987; Lydersen et
al., 1987; Lydersen and Smith, 1989;
Lydersen and Ryg, 1990; Lydersen,
1998). Stirling and Smith (2004)
surmised that most pups that survived
exposure to cold after their subnivean
lairs collapsed during unseasonal rains
were eventually killed by polar bears,
Arctic foxes, or gulls.
Subnivean lairs also provide refuge
from air temperatures too low for
survival of ringed seal pups. When
forced to flee into the water to avoid
predators, the ringed seal pups that
survive depend on the subnivean lairs
to subsequently warm themselves.
When snow cover is insufficient, pups
can freeze in their lairs, as documented
when roofs of lairs in the White Sea
were only 5 to 10 cm thick (Lukin and
Potelov, 1978). Stirling and Smith
(2004) also documented exposure of
ringed seals to hypothermia following
the collapse of subnivean lairs during
unseasonal rains near southeastern
Baffin Island.
During winter and spring, Arctic
ringed seals are found throughout the
Chukchi and Beaufort seas; and in the
Bering Sea, surveys indicate that ringed
seals use nearly the entire ice field over
the Bering Sea shelf. During an
exceptionally high ice year (1976),
Braham et al. (1984) found ringed seals
present in the southeastern Bering Sea
north of the Pribilof Islands to outer
Bristol Bay, primarily north of the ice
front. But they noted that most of these
seals were likely immature or
nonbreeding animals. Frost (1985)
indicated that ringed seals ‘‘occur as far
south as Nunivak Island and Bristol
Bay, depending on ice conditions in a
particular year, but generally are not
abundant south of Norton Sound except
in nearshore areas.’’ However, recent
surveys conducted in the Bering Sea
during spring have documented ringed
seals in both nearshore and offshore
habitat including south of Norton
Sound, AK (National Marine Mammal
Laboratory, 2012, unpublished data).
Crawford et al. (2012) reported that the
adult ringed seals tagged in Kotzebue
Sound, AK, remained in the Chukchi
Sea and the northern Bering Sea north
of St. Lawrence Island during winter
and spring. However, movement data
for ringed seals tagged near Barrow, AK,
indicated that some adults over-
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wintered farther south toward the shelf
break in the Bering Sea (North Slope
Borough, 2012, unpublished data).
Finally, harvest of ringed seal pups by
hunters in Quinhagak, Alaska (Coffing
et al., 1998) suggests that some ringed
seals may whelp south of Nunivak
Island.
Basking Period: Numbers of ringed
seals hauled out on the surface of the ice
typically begin to increase during spring
as the temperatures warm and the snow
covering the seals’ lairs melts. Although
the snow cover can melt rapidly, the ice
remains largely intact and serves as a
substrate for annual molting, during
which time seals spend many hours
basking in the sun (Smith, 1973; Smith
and Hammill, 1981; Finley, 1979; Kelly
and Quakenbush, 1990; Kelly et al.,
2010b). Adults generally molt from midMay to mid-July (McLaren, 1958),
although there is regional variation.
Kelly and Quakenbush (1990) reported
that in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas,
most seals begin basking in late May or
early June. Usually the largest numbers
of basking seals are observed in June
(McLaren, 1958; Smith, 1973; Finley,
1979; Smith et al., 1979; Smith and
Hammill, 1981; Moulton et al., 2002).
The relatively long periods of time
that ringed seals spend out of the water
during the molt (Smith, 1973; Smith and
Hammill, 1981; Kelly et al., 2010b) have
been ascribed to the need to maintain
elevated skin temperatures during new
hair growth (Feltz and Fay, 1966; Kelly
and Quakenbush, 1990). Higher skin
temperatures are facilitated by basking
on the ice and this may accelerate
shedding and regrowth of hair and skin
(Feltz and Fay, 1966). Feeding is
reduced and the seal’s metabolism
declines during the molt (AshwellErickson et al., 1986). As seals complete
this phase of the annual pelage cycle
and the seasonal sea ice melts during
the summer, ringed seals spend
increasing amounts of time in the water
feeding (Kelly et al., 2010b).
Open-Water Foraging Period: Most
Arctic ringed seals that winter in the
Bering and Chukchi seas are thought to
migrate northward in spring with the
receding ice edge and spend summer in
the pack ice of the northern Chukchi
and Beaufort seas (Burns, 1970; Frost,
1985). Arctic ringed seals are also
dispersed in ice-free areas of the Bering,
Chukchi, and Beaufort seas during the
open-water period. Overall, the record
from satellite tracking indicates that
Arctic ringed seals breeding in landfast
ice practice one of two strategies during
the open-water foraging period (Freitas
et al., 2008). Some seals forage within
100 km of their landfast ice breeding
habitat, while others make extensive
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movements of hundreds or thousands of
kilometers to forage in highly
productive areas and along the pack ice
edge. Movements during the open-water
foraging period by Arctic ringed seals
that breed in the pack ice are unknown.
High- quality, abundant food is
important to the annual energy budgets
of ringed seals. Ringed seals typically
lose a significant proportion of their
blubber mass during the spring to early
summer and then replenish their
blubber reserves by increasing feeding
during late summer, fall, and winter.
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Diet
Arctic ringed seals eat a wide variety
of prey spanning several trophic levels;
however, most prey is small and
preferred fishes tend to be schooling
species that form dense aggregations.
Ringed seals rarely prey upon more than
10 to 15 species in any specific
geographical location, and not more
than 2 to 4 of those species are
considered important prey. Despite
regional and seasonal variations in the
diets of Arctic ringed seals, fishes of the
cod family tend to dominate their diet
in many areas from late autumn through
early spring. Arctic cod (Boreogadus
saida) is often reported to be among the
most important prey species, especially
during the ice-covered periods of the
year. Crustaceans appear to become
more important in many areas during
the open water season, and are often
found to dominate the diets of young
ringed seals.
Critical Habitat Identification
In the following sections, we describe
the relevant definitions and
requirements in the ESA, and our
implementing regulations, and the key
information and criteria used to prepare
this proposed critical habitat
designation. In accordance with section
4(b)(2) of the ESA and our
implementing regulations at 50 CFR part
424, this proposed critical habitat
designation is based on the best
scientific data available. Our primary
sources of information are the NMFS
status review report for the ringed seal
(Kelly et al., 2010a) and the proposed
and final rules to list four subspecies of
the ringed seals, including the Arctic
ringed seal (75 FR 77476, December 10,
2010; 77 FR 76706, December 28, 2012).
Additional information sources include
articles in peer-reviewed journals, other
scientific reports, and relevant
Geographic Information System (GIS)
data (such as shoreline, maritime limits
and boundaries, and sea ice extent) for
area calculations and mapping.
We followed a five-step process to
identify specific areas that may qualify
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as critical habitat for the Arctic ringed
seal: (1) Determine the geographical area
occupied by the species; (2) identify
physical or biological habitat features
essential to the conservation of the
species; (3) delineate specific areas
within the geographical area occupied
by the species on which are found the
physical or biological features; (4)
determine whether the features in a
specific area may require special
management considerations or
protection; and (5) determine whether
any unoccupied areas are essential for
conservation. Our evaluation and
conclusions are described in detail in
the following sections.
Geographical Area Occupied by the
Species
The range of the Arctic ringed seal
was identified in the final ESA listing
rule (77 FR 76706; December 28, 2012)
as the Arctic Ocean and adjacent seas,
except west of 157° E. long. (the
Kamchatka Peninsula), where the
Okhotsk subspecies of the ringed seal
occurs, or in the Baltic Sea where the
Baltic subspecies of the ringed seal is
found. As noted above, we cannot
designate areas outside U.S. jurisdiction
as critical habitat. Thus, the
geographical area under consideration
for this designation is limited to areas
under the jurisdiction of the United
States that Arctic ringed seals actually
occupied at the time of listing. This area
extends to the outer boundary of the
U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) in
the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, and
south into the Bering Sea, as far south
as Bristol Bay in years with extensive
ice coverage (Kelly et al., 2010a). We
consider the shoreward extent of this
area to be the ‘‘coast line’’ of Alaska as
that term has been defined in the
Submerged Lands Act (‘‘the line of
ordinary low water along that portion of
the coast which is in direct contact with
the open sea and the line marking the
seaward limit of inland waters’’), 43
U.S.C. 1301(c).
Physical or Biological Features Essential
to the Conservation of the Species
Implementing regulations at 50 CFR
424.12(b) state that in determining what
areas are critical habitat, the Secretary
‘‘shall consider those physical and
biological features that are essential to
the conservation of a given species and
that may require special management
considerations or protection.’’ These
features may include: ‘‘(1) Space for
individual and population growth, and
for normal behavior; (2) Food, water, air,
light, minerals, or other nutritional or
physiological requirements; (3) Cover or
shelter; (4) Sites for breeding,
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reproduction, rearing of offspring,
germination, or seed dispersal; and
generally: (5) Habitats that are protected
from disturbance or are representative of
the historic geographical and ecological
distributions of a species.’’ The
regulations further state the Secretary
shall ‘‘focus on the principal biological
or physical constituent elements within
the defined area that are essential to the
conservation of the species. Known
primary constituent elements shall be
listed with the critical habitat
description. Primary constituent
elements may include the following:
Roost sites, nesting grounds, spawning
sites, feeding sites, seasonal wetland or
dryland, water quality or quantity, host
species or plant pollinator, geological
formation, vegetation type, tide, and
specific soil types.’’ For the purposes of
this proposed rule, the essential features
identified are the same as primary
constituent elements. Based on the best
scientific information available on the
physical and biological features and
habitat characteristics required to
sustain its life history functions, we
have determined that the following
features are essential to the conservation
of the Arctic ringed seal in the United
States.
1. Sea ice habitat suitable for the
formation and maintenance of
subnivean birth lairs used for sheltering
pups during whelping and nursing,
which is defined as seasonal landfast
(shorefast) ice, or dense, stable pack ice,
that has undergone deformation and
contains snowdrifts at least 54 cm deep.
Sea ice habitat suitable for the
formation and maintenance of
subnivean birth lairs used for sheltering
pups during whelping and nursing is
essential to conservation of the Arctic
ringed seal because as discussed above,
without the protection of lairs, ringed
seal pups are more vulnerable to
freezing and predation.
Snowdrifts of sufficient depth for
birth lair formation and maintenance
typically occur in deformed ice where
drifting has taken place along pressure
ridges or ice hummocks (Smith and
Stirling, 1975; Lydersen and Gjertz,
1986; Kelly, 1988; Furgal et al., 1996;
Lydersen, 1998). For purposes of
assessing potential impacts of projected
changes in April Northern Hemisphere
snow conditions on ringed seals, Kelly
et al. (2010a) considered 20 cm to be the
minimum average snow depth required
on areas of flat ice to form drifts of
sufficient depth to support birth lair
formation. Further, Kelly et al. (2010a,
p. 109) discussed that ringed seals
require snow drift depths of 50 to 65 cm
or more to support birth lair formation.
To identify a snow drift depth criterion
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for sea ice habitat that we consider
essential for Arctic ringed seal birth lair
formation and maintenance, we derived
a specific depth threshold as follows. At
least seven studies have reported
minimum snowdrift depth
measurements at Arctic ringed seal birth
lairs (typically measured near the center
of the lairs or over the breathing holes)
off the coasts of Alaska (Kelly et al.,
1986; Frost and Burns, 1989), the
Canadian Arctic Archipelago (Smith
and Stirling, 1975; Kelly, 1988; Furgal et
al., 1996), Svalbard (Lydersen and
Gjertz, 1986), and in the White Sea
(Lukin and Potelov, 1978). The average
minimum snowdrift depth at birth lairs
was 54 cm across all of the studies
combined, and 64 cm in the Alaska
studies only. The average from studies
in Alaska is based on data from fewer
years over a shorter time span than from
all studies combined (3 years during
1982–1984 versus 11 years during 1971–
1993, respectively); consequently, the
Alaska-specific average is more likely to
be biased if an anomalous weather
pattern occurred during its more limited
timeframe. For this reason, we conclude
that the average minimum snowdrift
depth based on all studies combined (54
cm) provides the best estimate of the
minimum snowdrift depth that is
essential for birth lairs.
Although Arctic ringed seals appear
to favor landfast ice as whelping habitat,
ringed seal whelping has also been
observed on both nearshore and offshore
drifting pack ice. As Reeves (1998)
noted, nearly all research on Arctic
ringed seal reproduction has been
conducted in landfast ice, and the
potential importance of stable but
drifting pack ice has not been
adequately investigated. Studies in the
Barents Sea (Wiig et al., 1999) and
Baffin Bay (Finley et al., 1983) have
documented pup production in pack
ice, and Smith and Stirling (1975),
citing unpublished data from the
‘‘Western Arctic’’ (presumably the
Canadian Beaufort Sea), indicated that
‘‘the offshore areas of shifting but
relatively stable ice are an important
part of the breeding habitat.’’ Lentfer
(1972) reported ‘‘a significant amount of
ringed seal denning and pupping on
moving heavy pack ice north of
Barrow.’’ Arctic ringed seal
vocalizations detected throughout the
winter and spring in long-term
autonomous acoustic recordings
collected along the shelf break northnorthwest of Barrow also suggest that
some ringed seals overwinter and breed
in offshore pack ice (Jones et al., in
press). We therefore conclude that the
best scientific information available
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indicates that sea ice habitat essential
for construction and maintenance of
birth lairs includes areas of both
shorefast ice and dense, stable pack ice
that contain snowdrifts of sufficient
depths, i.e., 54 cm.
2. Sea ice habitat suitable as a
platform for basking and molting, which
is defined as sea ice of 15 percent or
more concentration.
Sea ice habitat suitable as a platform
for basking and molting is essential to
conservation of the Arctic ringed seal
because molting is a biologicallyimportant, energy-intensive process that
could incur increased energetic costs if
it were to occur in water, or increased
risk of predation if it were to occur on
land. Moreover, we are unaware of any
studies establishing whether Arctic
ringed seals can molt successfully in
water, or reports of healthy Arctic
ringed seals basking on land (they are
known to come ashore when sick). If
Arctic ringed seals were unable to
successfully complete their annual molt,
they would be at increased risk from
parasites and disease.
During their annual molt, Arctic
ringed seals transition from lair use to
basking on the surface of the ice for long
periods of time near breathing holes,
lairs, or cracks in the ice. There are
limited data available on ice
concentrations (percentage of ocean
surface covered by sea ice) favored by
Arctic ringed seals during the basking
period, in particular for the time period
following ice breakup. Although a
number of studies have reported an
apparent preference for consolidated
stable ice (i.e., landfast ice and
consolidated pack ice), at least during
the initial weeks of the basking period,
some of these studies have also reported
observations of Arctic ringed seals
hauled out at low densities in
unconsolidated ice (e.g., Stirling et al.,
1982; Kingsley et al., 1985; Lunn et al.,
1997; Chambellant et al., 2012). Arctic
ringed seals in the Chukchi Sea have
also been observed basking in high
densities on the last remnants of the
seasonal sea ice during late June to early
July, near the end of the molting period
(Shawn Dahle, NMFS, personal
communication, 2013). Crawford et al.
(2012) reported that the average ice
concentrations (± standard error [SE];
standard error is a measure of variability
in the data) used by ringed seals in the
Chukchi and Bering seas during the
basking period in June was 20 percent
(SE = 7.8 percent) for subadults and 38
percent (SE = 21.4 percent) for adults.
Based on the best available information,
we conclude that sea ice essential for
basking and molting is sea ice of at least
15 percent concentration.
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3. Primary prey resources to support
Arctic ringed seals, which are defined to
be Arctic cod, saffron cod, shrimps, and
amphipods.
Primary prey resources are essential
to conserving the Arctic ringed seal,
because Arctic ringed seals likely rely
on these prey resources the most to meet
their annual energy budgets. Arctic
ringed seals feed on a wide variety of
vertebrate and invertebrate prey species,
but certain prey species appear to
occupy a prominent role in their diets
in waters along the Alaskan coast.
Quakenbush et al. (2011, Table 3)
reported that prey items found in at
least 25 percent of ringed seal stomachs
collected within the 1961 to 1984 and
1998 to 2009 time periods in the Bering
and Chukchi seas included Arctic cod,
saffron cod (Eleginus gracilis), shrimps
(from the families Hippolytidae,
Pandalidae, and Crangonidae), and
amphipods (primarily from the families
Gammaridae and Hyperiidae). In the
Barrow vicinity, Dehn et al. (2007, Table
2) reported that prey items found in at
least 25 percent of the stomachs of
ringed seals collected between 1996 and
2001 included euphausiids
(Thysanoessa spp.), cods (primarily
Arctic and saffron cod), mysids (Mysis
and Neomysis spp.), amphipods, and
Pandalid shrimps. Finally, Lowry et al.
(1980) found that prey items that were
consumed in the greatest quantities (i.e.,
≥25 percent of the total food volume in
any of the five seasonal samples) by
ringed seals in the Bering and Chukchi
seas included Arctic cod, saffron cod,
shrimp, and amphipods (Chukchi Sea
only), and in the central Beaufort Sea
included Arctic cod as well as
Gammarid and Hyperiid amphipods.
Arctic cod, saffron cod, shrimps, and
amphipods were identified as
prominent prey species for the studies
conducted in both the Bering Sea and
the Chukchi Sea. As noted above, Arctic
cod and amphipods were also identified
as the most important prey species by
volume for ringed seals sampled in the
Beaufort Sea. Therefore, based on these
studies, we conclude that Arctic cod,
saffron cod, shrimps, and amphipods
are the primary prey resources of Arctic
ringed seals in U.S. waters. As
discussed above, Arctic ringed seals
feed on a variety of prey items and
regional and seasonal differences in diet
have been reported; therefore, we
conclude that areas in which the
primary prey essential feature occurs
will contain one or more of these
particular prey resources.
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Specific Areas Containing Physical or
Biological Features Essential to the
Species
After determining the geographical
area occupied by the Arctic ringed seal
at the time of listing, and identifying the
physical and biological features
essential to its conservation, we then
considered which specific area(s) may
be eligible for designation as critical
habitat. For a specific area to be eligible
for designation, it must contain at least
one physical or biological feature
essential to the conservation of the
species that may require special
management considerations or
protection. When several habitats, each
satisfying the requirements for
designation as critical habitat, are
located in proximity to one another, a
single inclusive area may be designated
as critical habitat (50 CFR 424.12(d)).
In identifying these specific areas, we
first focused on those physical or
biological features that support the
critical Arctic ringed seal life history
functions of whelping and nursing,
when birth lairs are constructed and
maintained, and molting (i.e., specific
areas that contain the sea ice essential
features). As discussed above, Arctic
ringed seals are highly associated with
sea ice, and are thought to migrate
seasonally to maintain access to the ice.
Arctic ringed seal whelping, nursing,
and molting occur in the Bering,
Chukchi, and Beaufort seas. To
delineate specific areas that contain one
or both of the sea ice essential features
we considered where the sea ice
essential features occur in all three seas.
The dynamic nature of sea ice and the
spatial and temporal variations in sea
ice cover and on-ice snow cover
constrain our ability to map with
precision the specific geographic
locations where the ice-associated
essential features occur. The specific
geographic locations of where essential
sea ice habitat occurs vary from year to
year, or even day to day, depending on
many factors, including time of year,
local weather, and oceanographic
conditions. In addition, the duration
that any given location has sea ice
habitat essential for birth lairs or for
molting can vary annually depending on
the rate of ice melt and other factors.
Temporal overlap of Arctic ringed seal
molting with whelping and nursing,
combined with the dynamic nature of
sea ice, also makes it impracticable to
separately identify specific areas where
each of these essential sea ice features
occur. Since the ESA requires the
designation of critical habitat where one
or more such features occur, the
inability to separately identify areas
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where each essential ice feature occurs
is inconsequential. Arctic ringed seals
can range widely, which, combined
with the dynamic variations in sea ice
and snow cover, results in individuals
distributing broadly and utilizing
different sea ice habitat within a range
of suitable conditions. We integrated
these physical and biological factors
into our identification of specific areas
based on the seasonal distribution and
movements of Arctic ringed seals and
satellite-derived estimates of the
position of the ice edge over time.
Although this approach allowed us to
identify specific areas that contain one
or both of the essential sea ice features,
the available data supported delineation
of specific areas only at a coarse scale.
Consequently, we delineated a single
specific area that contains the sea ice
features essential to the conservation of
Arctic ringed seals, as described below.
We first identified the southern
boundary of the specific area essential
to conservation of the Arctic ringed seal.
The information discussed above
regarding the distribution of Arctic
ringed seals in the Bering Sea (see
Seasonal Distribution and Habitat Use)
suggests that sea ice essential for Arctic
ringed seal birth lairs (and potentially
for molting) extends to some point south
of St. Matthew Island and Nunivak
Island. A precise southern boundary for
this habitat is unavailable because
existing information is limited on the
spatial distribution of Arctic ringed
seals in the Bering Sea during spring
and where they may whelp. In addition,
although minimum on-ice snowdrift
depths are essential for ringed seal birth
lairs, we are not aware of any available
data on this particular component of sea
ice cover in the Bering Sea that could
assist in identifying the southern
boundary of essential Arctic ringed seal
birth lair habitat. We therefore turned to
Sea Ice Index data maintained by the
National Snow and Ice Data Center
(NSIDC) for information on the
estimated median position of the sea ice
edge in the Bering Sea during April
(Fetterer et al., 2002, updated 2009;
accessed December 2012), which is the
peak month for Arctic ringed seal
whelping activity (peak molting for
adults occurs later in the spring). This
estimated median ice edge is derived
from a time series of satellite records for
the 1979 to 2000 reference period. We
note that the NSIDC has lengthened this
reference period to include more recent
data through 2010. However, several of
those more recent years had aboveaverage ice extent in the Bering Sea; and
use of these data would have resulted in
the inclusion of areas that are unlikely
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to contain the essential sea ice features
on a consistent basis in more than a few
scattered portions of those areas.
The April median ice edge position is
located approximately 135 km (73 nmi)
southwest of St. Matthew Island and
110 km (59 nmi) south of Nunivak
Island, which is relatively consistent
with the information discussed above
regarding the spring distribution of
Arctic ringed seals in the Bering Sea.
We therefore conclude that this estimate
of the position of the April median ice
edge provides a reasonable estimate of
the southern extent of where the sea ice
essential features occur. To simplify this
southern boundary for purposes of
delineation on maps, we modified this
median ice edge contour as follows: (1)
Line vertices between the intersection
point of the median ice extent at the
outer extent of the U.S. EEZ at 60°31′ N.
lat., 179°13′ W. long., and the point at
58°22′ N. lat., 170°27′ W. long., were
removed to form the segment of the
southern boundary that extends from
the outer extent of the U.S. EEZ
southeast approximately 553 km; (2)
line vertices between 58°22′ N. lat.,
170°27′ W. long., and 59° N. lat., 164°
W. long., were removed to form a
second segment of the southern
boundary that extends east
approximately 370 km; and (3) finally,
these two contour line segments were
connected to the mainland coast
southeast of Cape Avinof by 164° W.
long. This editing produced a simplified
southern boundary that retains the
general shape of the original contour
line, while including 99 percent of the
area encompassed by the more detailed
original line.
We note that some Arctic ringed seals
may whelp south/southeast of the
southern boundary described above, as
evidenced by harvest records of ringed
seal pups (Coffing et al., 1998).
However, variability in the annual
extent and timing of sea ice in this
southernmost portion of the Arctic
ringed seal’s range in U.S. waters
renders the area south of the boundary
described above unlikely to contain the
essential sea ice features on a consistent
basis in more than a few scattered areas.
We then identified the northern
boundary of the specific area essential
to conservation of the Arctic ringed seal.
As discussed above, the available data
suggest that although Arctic ringed seals
appear to favor landfast ice, they are
widely distributed offshore in the
northern Chukchi Sea and Beaufort seas
and Arctic Ocean. Molting ringed seals
use suitable sea ice as a haul-out
platform, and many seals are thought to
migrate north with the receding ice. As
discussed above, the specific geographic
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locations where the sea ice essential
features occur vary within and between
years. Given the inherent variability in
the spatial distribution of sea ice and
the widespread distribution of Arctic
ringed seals, including in offshore pack
ice, we defined the northern and eastern
boundaries of the one specific area
identified as the outer extent of the U.S.
EEZ. We note that Canada contests the
limits of the U.S. EEZ in the eastern
Beaufort Sea, asserting that the line
delimiting the two countries’ EEZs
should follow the 141st meridian out to
a distance of 200 nmi (as opposed to an
equidistant line that extends seaward
perpendicular to the coast at the U.S.Canada land border). Because Arctic
ringed seals are broadly distributed in
suitable habitat, we identified the
shoreward extent of this specific area as
the coast line of Alaska as defined above
(see Geographical Area Occupied by the
Species).
The primary prey resources essential
feature also occurs within the specific
area identified above (e.g., North Pacific
Fishery Management Council, 2009;
NMFS, 2013), as evidenced by the
presence of the primary prey species in
the stomach contents of Arctic ringed
seals sampled in the Bering, Chukchi,
and Beaufort seas off Alaska (see
Physical or Biological Features Essential
to Conservation of the Species). This is
of particular note with respect to the
northern boundary of this specific area.
Following molting, some Arctic ringed
seals may remain in nearshore waters
along the coast to feed, while others
travel extensively and feed farther
offshore (Frost, 1985; Gjertz et al., 2000;
Freitas et al., 2008; Kelly et al., 2010b).
Harwood et al. (2012) reported that in
late summer, several tagged ringed seals
that migrated from the Canadian
Beaufort Sea to the Beaufort and
Chukchi seas off Alaska tended to
remain over the continental shelf,
almost always remaining within 100 km
of shore. However, recent telemetry data
documenting Arctic ringed seal
movements during the open-water
season showed several seals made
multiple trips between continental shelf
waters and the southern pack ice edge
(Herreman et al., 2012), which was well
into the Arctic Basin and beyond the
outer extent of the U.S. EEZ in some
cases. Dive recorders indicated that
foraging-type movements occurred over
both the continental shelf and deep
waters of the Arctic Basin, suggesting
that both areas may be important during
the open-water foraging period. Thus,
the northern boundary of the specific
area identified above accounts not only
for habitat containing one or both of the
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sea ice features essential to
conservation, but very likely also
includes the distributions of the primary
prey resources used by foraging Arctic
ringed seals in U.S. waters.
Special Management Considerations or
Protection
An occupied area may be designated
as critical habitat only if it contains
physical or biological features that ‘‘may
require special management
considerations or protection’’ (50 CFR
424.12(b)). It is important to note that
the phrase ‘‘may require special
management considerations or
protection’’ refers to the physical or
biological features, rather than the area
proposed as critical habitat. We
interpret this to mean that a feature may
presently or in the future require special
management considerations or
protection. Joint NMFS and USFWS
regulations at 50 CFR 424.02(j) define
‘‘special management considerations or
protection’’ to mean ‘‘any methods or
procedures useful in protecting physical
and biological features of the
environment for the conservation of
listed species.’’
The status review report (Kelly et al.,
2010a) and the proposed and final rules
listing the subspecies as threatened (75
FR 77476, December 10, 2010; 77 FR
76706, December 28, 2012)
comprehensively review the threats
affecting the Arctic ringed seal. Based
upon that review, we identified several
categories of human activities and
associated threats that may affect each
of the features identified as essential to
conservation of Arctic ringed seals.
These activities include: Greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions; oil and gas
exploration, development, and
production; shipping and
transportation; and commercial fishing.
Below, we evaluate whether each
essential feature may require special
management considerations or
protection due to the potential effects of
these activities on the essential features.
We note that our evaluation does not
consider an exhaustive list of potential
effects on the essential features, but
rather considers the primary potential
effects that we are aware of at this time.
GHG Emissions: The principal threat
to the persistence of the Arctic ringed
seal is the ongoing and anticipated loss
of sea ice and on-ice snow cover
stemming from climate change. Climate
change related threats to the Arctic
ringed seal’s habitat are discussed in
detail in the ringed seal status review
report (Kelly et al., 2010a), as well as in
the proposed and final rules listing the
Arctic ringed seal as threatened.
Activities that release carbon dioxide
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and other heat-trapping GHGs into the
atmosphere, most notably those that
involve fossil fuel combustion, are a
major contributing factor to climate
change and loss of sea ice (IPCC, 2013).
Such activities may adversely affect the
essential features of Arctic ringed seal
habitat by diminishing sea ice suitable
for birth lairs and molting, and by
causing changes in the distribution and/
or species composition of prey
resources. The best scientific data
currently available do not allow us to
identify a causal linkage between any
particular single source of GHG
emissions and identifiable effects on the
physical and biological features
essential to Arctic ringed seals.
Regardless, given that the quality and
quantity of these essential habitat
features, in particular sea ice, may be
diminished by the effects of climate
change, we conclude that special
management considerations or
protection may be necessary, either now
or in the future, even if the exact focus
and nature of that management is
presently undeterminable.
Oil and Gas Activity: Extensive oil
and gas reserves, coupled with rising
global demand, make it very likely that
oil and gas activity will increase
throughout the Arctic in the future. Oil
and gas exploration, development, and
production activities in the U.S. Arctic
may include: Seismic surveys;
exploratory, delineation, and
production drilling operations;
construction of artificial islands,
causeways, ice roads, shore-based
facilities, and pipelines; and vessel and
aircraft operations. These activities have
the potential to affect Arctic ringed seals
and their habitat, primarily through
noise, physical disturbance, and
pollution, particularly in the event of an
oil spill, and especially a large oil spill.
The Arctic ringed seal’s range
overlaps with, and is adjacent to, a
number of active and planned oil and
gas operations. To date, most oil and gas
activities conducted off the Alaska coast
have occurred in the Beaufort Sea,
primarily near Prudhoe Bay. No oil
fields have been developed or brought
into production in the Chukchi Sea;
however, the one recent lease sale in the
Chukchi Sea (Lease Sale 193) and
exploration drilling programs moving
forward in this region signal growing
interest in oil and gas development
there.
Large oil spills are generally
considered to be the greatest threat of oil
and gas activities in the Arctic marine
environment (Arctic Monitoring and
Assessment Program (AMAP), 2007). In
contrast to spills on land, large spills at
sea are difficult to contain and may
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spread over hundreds or thousands of
kilometers. Responding to a sizeable
spill in the Arctic environment would
be particularly challenging. Reaching a
spill site and responding effectively
would be especially difficult, if not
impossible, in winter when weather can
be severe and daylight extremely
limited. Oil spills under ice or in icecovered waters are the most challenging
to deal with, due to, among other
factors, limitations on the effectiveness
of current containment and recovery
technologies when sea ice is present.
The difficulties experienced in stopping
and containing the 2010 oil blowout at
the Deepwater Horizon well in the Gulf
of Mexico, where environmental
conditions, available infrastructure, and
response preparedness are
comparatively good, point toward even
greater challenges in attempting a
similar feat in a much more
environmentally severe and
geographically remote location.
Although planning, management, and
use of best practices can help reduce
risks and impacts, the history of oil and
gas activities indicates that accidents
cannot be eliminated (AMAP, 2007).
Data on large spills (e.g., operational
discharges, spills from pipelines,
blowouts) in Arctic waters are limited
because oil exploration and production
there has been limited. The Bureau of
Ocean Energy Management (BOEM,
2011) estimated the chance of one or
more oil spills greater than or equal to
1,000 barrels occurring if development
were to take place in the Beaufort Sea
or Chukchi Sea Planning Areas as 26
percent for the Beaufort Sea over the
estimated 20 years of production and
development, and 40 percent for the
Chukchi Sea over the estimated 25 years
of production and development.
The introduction of sounds and
physical disturbance associated with oil
and gas exploration and development
could also affect Arctic ringed seals and
their habitat. Such activities may
include physical presence of vessels,
icebreaking activity, aircraft activity,
seismic surveys, site clearance and
shallow hazards surveys, and drilling
and production activities. Icebreaking
vessels, which may be used for in-ice
seismic surveys or to manage ice near
exploratory drilling ships, have the
potential to affect Arctic ringed seals
and their habitat through both acoustic
effects and physical alteration of the sea
ice (Richardson et al., 1995). Seismic
surveys are a particularly intense source
of noise, and thus warrant specific
consideration. Arctic ringed seals, like
other phocids or ‘‘true’’ seals, have good
low-frequency hearing, and so it is
expected that they will be susceptible to
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masking of biologically significant
signals by low frequency sounds, such
as those from seismic surveys (Gordon
et al., 2003). Reported seal responses to
seismic surveys have been variable and
often contradictory, although they
suggest that pinnipeds frequently do not
avoid the area within a few hundred
meters of operating airgun arrays
(Brueggeman et al., 1991; Harris et al.;
2001, Miller and Davis, 2002).
Construction, drilling, and development
activities on a manmade artificial island
were reported to have had at most
minor, short-term, and localized effects
on ringed seals (Blackwell et al., 2004;
Richardson and Williams, 2004;
Moulton et al., 2005); and during a
single season of a near shore exploratory
drilling operation, Harwood et al. (2007)
found no detectable effects on ringed
seals.
In summary, a major oil spill could
render areas containing the identified
essential features unsuitable for use by
Arctic ringed seals. In such an event, sea
ice habitat suitable for whelping,
nursing, or molting could be oiled. The
primary Arctic ringed seal prey species
could also become contaminated,
experience mortality, or be otherwise
adversely affected by spilled oil. In
addition, disturbance effects (both
physical disturbance and acoustic
effects) could alter the quality of the
essential features of Artic ringed seal
critical habitat, or render habitat
unsuitable. We conclude that the
essential features of the habitat of the
Arctic ringed seal may require special
management considerations or
protection in the future to minimize the
risks posed to these features by oil and
gas exploration, development, and
production.
Shipping and Transportation: The
reduction in Arctic sea ice that has
occurred in recent years has renewed
interest in using the Arctic Ocean as a
potential waterway for coastal, regional,
and trans-Arctic marine operations
(Brigham and Ellis, 2004). Climate
models predict that the warming trend
in the Arctic will accelerate, causing the
ice to begin melting earlier in the spring
and resume freezing later in the fall,
resulting in an expansion of potential
shipping routes and a lengthening of the
potential navigation season (Arctic
Climate Impact Assessment (ACIA),
2004; Khon et al., 2010). At present, the
two main navigation routes crossing the
Arctic are the Northwest Passage (NWP)
and the Northern Sea Route (NSR).
Based on an analysis of sea ice model
projections, Smith and Stephenson
(2013) concluded that, by mid-century,
changing sea ice conditions will enable
expanded September navigability for
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common open-water ships along these
two navigation routes. By 2100, the
navigation season for the NSR is
projected to increase from the current
period of 20 to 30 days per year to 90
to 100 days per year (ACIA, 2004).
The fact that nearly all shipping
activity in the Arctic (with the
exception of icebreaking) purposefully
avoids areas of ice, and primarily occurs
during the ice-free or low-ice seasons,
helps to mitigate the risks of shipping to
Arctic ringed seal habitat. However, as
noted above, icebreakers pose greater
risks to ringed seals and their habitat
since they are capable of operating yearround in all but the heaviest ice
conditions and are often used to escort
other types of vessels (e.g., tankers and
bulk carriers) through ice-covered areas.
Furthermore, new classes of ships are
being designed that serve the dual roles
of both tanker/carrier and icebreaker
(Arctic Council, 2009). Therefore, if
icebreaking activities increase in the
Arctic in the future, as expected, the
likelihood of negative impacts (e.g., oil
spills, pollution, noise, disturbance, and
habitat alteration) occurring in icecovered areas where Arctic ringed seals
reside will likely also increase.
Increases in international shipping are
producing ever-greater levels of
underwater noise capable of long-range
¨
transmission (Southall, 2005; Gotz et al.,
2009). All vessels produce sound during
operation, which when propagated at
certain frequencies and intensities can
alter the normal behavior of marine
mammals, mask their underwater
communications and other uses of
sound, cause them to avoid noisy areas,
and, in extreme cases, damage their
auditory systems and cause death
(Marine Mammal Commission, 2007;
¨
Arctic Council, 2009; Gotz et al., 2009).
In addition to the potential
introduction of sound from increased
vessel traffic and the physical presence
and movements of these vessels, the
maritime shipping industry transports
various types of petroleum products,
both as fuel and cargo, within the
proposed critical habitat. If increased
shipping involves the tanker transport
of crude oil or oil products, there would
be an increased risk of spills (ACIA,
2005; U.S. Arctic Research Commission,
2012). Similar to oil and gas activities,
the most significant threat posed by
shipping activities is considered the
accidental or illegal discharge of oil or
other toxic substance carried by ships
(Arctic Council, 2009).
We conclude that the essential
features of the habitat of the Arctic
ringed seal may require special
management considerations or
protection in the future to minimize the
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risks posed to these features by potential
shipping and transportation activities,
because: (1) Both the physical
disturbance and noise associated with
these activities could displace seals
from favored habitat that contains the
essential features, thus altering the
quantity and/or quality of these features;
and (2) in the event of an oil spill, sea
ice essential for birth lairs and for
molting could become oiled, and the
quantity and/or quality of the primary
prey resources could be adversely
affected.
Commercial Fisheries: The proposed
critical habitat area overlaps with waters
of the Federal Arctic Management Area
and the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area. No commercial
fishing is permitted within the Arctic
Management Area due to insufficient
data to support the sustainable
management of a commercial fishery
there. However, as additional
information becomes available,
commercial fishing may be allowed in
this management area. Two of the
primary Arctic ringed seal prey species
identified as essential to conservation—
Arctic cod and saffron cod—have been
identified as likely initial target species
for commercial fishing in Federal Arctic
waters in the future (North Pacific
Fishery Management Council, 2009).
In the northern portion of the Bering
Sea and Aleutian Islands Management
Area, limited commercial fisheries
overlap with the southernmost portion
of the proposed critical habitat. Portions
of the proposed critical habitat also
overlap with certain state commercial
fisheries management areas.
Commercial catches from waters in the
proposed critical habitat area primarily
include: Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis), several other flatfish
species, Pacific cod (Gadus
macrocephalus), several crab species,
walleye pollock (Theragra
chalcogramma), and several salmon
species.
Commercial fisheries may affect the
primary prey resources identified as
essential to the conservation of the
Arctic ringed seal, through removal of
prey biomass and potentially through
modification of benthic habitat by
bottom-trawl gear. Given the potential
changes in commercial fishing that may
occur with the expected increasing
length of the open-water season and
range expansion of some economically
valuable species responding to climate
change, we conclude that the primary
prey resources essential feature may
require special management
considerations or protection in the
future to address potential adverse
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effects of commercial fishing on this
feature.
Unoccupied Areas
Section 3(5)(A)(ii) of the ESA further
defines critical habitat to include
specific areas outside the geographical
area occupied by the species if the
Secretary determines them to be
essential for the conservation of the
species. Our regulations at 50 CFR
424.12(e) emphasize that the Secretary
‘‘shall designate as critical habitat areas
outside the geographical area presently
occupied by a species only when a
designation limited to its present range
would be inadequate to ensure the
conservation of the species.’’ We have
not identified any specific areas outside
the geographical area occupied by the
Arctic ringed seal that are essential for
its conservation; consequently, we are
not proposing to designate any specific
areas outside its current range.
Application of ESA Section 4(a)(3)(B)(i)
ESA section 4(a)(3)(B)(i) states: ‘‘The
Secretary shall not designate as critical
habitat any lands or other geographical
areas owned or controlled by the
Department of Defense, or designated
for its use, that are subject to an
integrated natural resources
management plan prepared under
section 670a of this title [section 101 of
the Sikes Act], if the Secretary
determines in writing that such plan
provides a benefit to the species for
which critical habitat is proposed for
designation.’’ We contacted the
Department of Defense (DOD) and
requested information on any facilities
or managed areas that are subject to an
Integrated Natural Resources
Management Plan (INRMP) and are
located within areas that could
potentially be proposed as critical
habitat for the Arctic ringed seal. In
response, DOD provided a map of
facilities subject to an INRMP. No DOD
lands overlap with the area proposed as
critical habitat. Therefore, we conclude
that there are no properties owned,
controlled, or designated for use by
DOD that are subject to ESA section
4(a)(3)(B)(i) for this proposed critical
habitat.
Application of ESA Section 4(b)(2)
Before including areas in a critical
habitat designation, section 4(b)(2) of
the ESA and our implementing
regulations require the Secretary to take
into consideration the economic,
national security, and other relevant
impacts of the designation. Impacts may
be quantitatively or qualitatively
described, and considered at a scale that
the Secretary determines to be
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appropriate (50 CFR 424.19(b)).
Additionally, the Secretary has
discretion to exclude any particular area
from the critical habitat upon a
determination that the benefits of such
exclusion outweigh the benefits of
designation. The Secretary, however,
cannot exclude any particular area if,
based on the best scientific and
commercial data available, the Secretary
determines that the failure to designate
that area as critical habitat will result in
the extinction of the species concerned.
Because the authority to exclude any
area from the critical habitat designation
is discretionary, exclusion is not
required for any particular area. For the
reasons set forth below, we do not
propose to exercise our discretion to
exclude any areas from the proposed
critical habitat designation.
The primary impacts of a critical
habitat designation arise from the ESA
section 7(a)(2) requirement that Federal
agencies ensure their actions are not
likely to result in the destruction or
adverse modification of critical habitat
(i.e., adverse modification standard).
Determining these impacts is
complicated by the fact that section
7(a)(2) contains the overlapping
requirement that Federal agencies
ensure their actions are not likely to
jeopardize the species’ continued
existence (i.e., the jeopardy standard).
One incremental impact of critical
habitat designation is the extent to
which Federal agencies modify their
proposed actions to ensure they are not
likely to adversely modify the critical
habitat, beyond any modifications they
would make because of listing and the
jeopardy standard. Additional impacts
of critical habitat designation include
any state and/or local protection that
may be triggered as a direct result of
designation (we did not identify any
such impacts), and benefits that may
arise from education of the public to the
importance of an area for species
conservation.
A draft economic report, prepared by
an environmental consulting firm (in
cooperation with NMFS) with expertise
in natural resource economics, describes
the impact analyses for this proposed
rule in detail (Cardno Entrix, 2014). In
determining the impacts of designation,
we focused on the incremental change
in Federal agency actions as a result of
critical habitat designation and the
adverse modification standard (see
Arizona Cattle Growers v. Salazar, 606
F. 3d 1160 (9th Cir. 2010)) (holding that
the FWS permissibly attributed the
economic impacts of protecting the
northern spotted owl as part of the
baseline and was not required to factor
those impacts into the economic
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analysis of the effects of the critical
habitat designation). We analyzed the
impacts of this proposed designation
based on a comparison of conditions
with and without the designation of
critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal.
The ‘‘without critical habitat’’ scenario
represents the baseline for the analysis.
It includes process requirements and
habitat protections already extended to
the Arctic ringed seal under its ESA
listing and under other Federal, state,
and local regulations. The ‘‘with critical
habitat’’ scenario describes the
incremental impacts associated
specifically with the designation of
critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal.
This analysis assesses the incremental
costs and benefits that may arise due to
the proposed critical habitat
designation, with economic costs
estimated within a 10-year postdesignation timeframe. The 10-year
timeframe was chosen because it is
lengthy enough to reflect the planning
horizon for reasonably predicting future
human activities, yet it is short enough
to allow reasonable projections of
changes in use patterns in an area, as
well as of exogenous factors (e.g., world
supply and demand for petroleum, U.S.
inflation rate trends) that may be
influential. We recognize that economic
costs of the designation are likely to
extend beyond the 10-year timeframe of
the analysis, though we have no
information indicating that such costs in
subsequent years would be different
from those projected for the first 10-year
period. Although not quantified or
analyzed in detail due to the high level
of uncertainty regarding longer-term
effects, the draft economic report
includes a discussion of the potential
types of costs and benefits that may
accrue beyond the 10-year time window
of the analysis.
Benefits of Designation
As noted above, the protection
afforded under the ESA section 7
requirement for Federal agencies to
ensure their actions are not likely to
destroy or adversely modify designated
critical habitat is in addition to ESA
requirements to protect listed species.
Specifically, ESA section 7(a)(1)
requires all Federal agencies to use their
authorities in furtherance of the
purposes of the ESA by carrying out
programs for the conservation of
endangered and threatened species, and
section 7(a)(2) requires Federal agencies
to ensure their actions are not likely to
jeopardize the continued existence of
listed species. Another benefit of critical
habitat designation is that it provides
specific notice of the features essential
to the conservation of the Arctic ringed
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seal and where they occur. This
information will focus future
consultations on the key habitat
attributes and avoid unnecessary
attention on other, non-essential habitat
features. By identifying the specific
areas where the features essential to
conservation of the Arctic ringed seal
occur, there may also be enhanced
awareness by Federal agencies and the
general public of activities that might
affect those essential features. Moreover,
identification of features essential to the
conservation of the species may
improve discussions with action
agencies regarding relevant habitat
considerations of proposed projects.
In addition, the critical habitat
designation may result in indirect
benefits, as discussed in detail in the
draft economic report (Cardno Entrix,
2014), including education benefits and
enhanced public awareness, which may
help focus and contribute to
conservation efforts for the Arctic ringed
seal and its habitat. For example, by
identifying features essential to
conservation of the Arctic ringed seal
and where those features are found,
complementary protections may be
developed under state or local
regulations or voluntary conservation
plans. These other forms of benefits may
be economic in nature (whether market
or non-market, consumptive, nonconsumptive, or passive), educational,
cultural, or sociological, or they may be
expressed through beneficial changes in
the ecological functioning of the
species’ habitat, which itself yields
ancillary welfare benefits (e.g.,
improved quality of life) to the region’s
human population. For example,
because the critical habitat designation
is expected to result in enhanced
conservation of the Arctic ringed seal
over time, residents of the region who
value these seals, such as subsistence
users, are expected to experience
indirect benefits. As another example,
the geographic area of the proposed
critical habitat overlaps substantially
with the range of the polar bear in the
United States, and the Arctic ringed seal
is the primary prey species of the polar
bear, so the designation may also
provide indirect conservation benefits to
the polar bear. Indirect conservation
benefits may also extend to other cooccurring species, such as the Pacific
walrus and other seal species.
It is not presently feasible to
monetize, or even quantify, each
component part of the benefits accruing
from the designation of critical habitat
for the Arctic ringed seal. Therefore, we
augmented the quantitative
measurements that are summarized here
and discussed in detail in the economic
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report with qualitative and descriptive
assessments, as provided for under 50
CFR 424.19(b) and in guidance from the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) (OMB Circular A–4, September
17, 2003). Although we cannot monetize
or quantify all of the incremental
benefits of the proposed critical habitat
designation, we believe that they are not
inconsequential.
Economic Impacts of Designation
Direct economic costs of the critical
habitat designation accrue primarily
through implementation of section 7 of
the ESA in consultations with Federal
agencies to ensure their proposed
actions are not likely to destroy or
adversely modify critical habitat. Those
economic impacts may include both
administrative costs and project
modifications. At this time, on the basis
of how protections are currently being
implemented for Arctic ringed seals
under the MMPA and as a threatened
species under the ESA, we do not
anticipate that additional requests for
project modifications will result
specifically from a designation of
critical habitat. As a result, the direct
incremental costs of the proposed
critical habitat designation are expected
to be limited to the additional
administrative costs of considering
Arctic ringed seal critical habitat in
future ESA section 7 consultations.
Because the Arctic ringed seal is
newly listed and we lack a lengthy
consultation history for this species, we
needed to make assumptions about the
types of future Federal activities that
might require section 7 consultations
under the ESA. To identify the types of
Federal activities that may affect critical
habitat for the Arctic ringed seal, and
therefore would be subject to the ESA
section 7 adverse modification standard,
we examined recent incidental take
authorizations issued by NMFS under
the MMPA and the limited number of
ESA section 7 consultations that have
addressed Arctic ringed seals. To derive
estimates of the maximum number of
future oil and gas related consultations,
we extrapolated from the maximum
exploration activity level described in
the supplemental draft environmental
impact statement on the effects of oil
and gas activities in the Arctic Ocean
(NMFS, 2013). We request Federal
agencies to provide us with information
on future consultations, if our
assumptions omitted any future actions
likely to affect the proposed critical
habitat.
We identified several categories of
activities with a Federal nexus that may
affect critical habitat for the Arctic
ringed seal within the time frame of the
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analysis (10 years post-designation) and,
therefore, would be subject to the ESA
section 7 adverse modification standard.
These include oil and gas related
activities, dredge mining, navigation
dredging, commercial fishing, oil spill
prevention and response, and certain
military activities. All of the projected
future Federal actions that may trigger
consultation due to the potential to
affect critical habitat also have the
potential to affect individual ringed
seals. In other words, none of the
activities we identified would trigger
consultation solely on the basis of the
proposed critical habitat designation.
Federal action agencies with
jurisdiction over projected future
actions that may affect the proposed
critical habitat area include the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, BOEM,
Bureau of Land Management, DOD,
Environmental Protection Agency, U.S.
Coast Guard, and NMFS. We would
expect the majority of projected
consultations due to potential effects on
critical habitat to involve NMFS and
BOEM authorizations and permitting of
oil and gas related activities.
As detailed in the draft economic
report (Cardno Entrix, 2014), the total
incremental costs associated with this
proposed critical habitat designation
within the 10-year post-designation
timeframe, in discounted present value
terms, were estimated at $1.33 million
(discounted at 7 percent) to $1.86
million (discounted at 3 percent).
Ninety-five percent of the incremental
costs attributed to the critical habitat
designation are expected to accrue from
consultations associated with oil and
gas related activities in the Chukchi and
Beaufort seas. We note that absent
historical experience on consultation
frequency involving the proposed
critical habitat, in deriving these cost
estimates, we assumed that a maximum
projected level of oil and gas activity
will occur annually (10 formal
consultations each and every year; and
several other formal and informal
consultations over the 10-year postdesignation timeframe). However, it is
unlikely that this peak level of activity
would occur every year. Indeed, in
2011, 2012, and 2013, there were one,
five, and three formal consultations,
respectively, completed relating to oil
and gas activities in the Beaufort and
Chukchi seas. While not quantifiable at
this time, the draft economic report
(Cardno Entrix, 2014) discusses that the
oil and gas industry may also incur
indirect costs associated with the
critical habitat designation if future
third-party litigation over specific
consultations is successful and creates
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delays or other sources of regulatory
uncertainty.
In summary, we have preliminarily
concluded, subject to further
consideration based on public comment,
that the potential economic impacts of
the proposed critical habitat designation
would be modest both in absolute terms
and relative to the level of economic
activity expected to occur in the affected
area in the foreseeable future. As a
result, and in light of the benefits of
critical habitat designation discussed
above and in the draft economic report,
we are not proposing to exclude any
areas pursuant to section 4(b)(2) of the
ESA based on economic impacts.
National Security Impacts of
Designation
Section 4(b)(2) of the ESA also
requires consideration of national
security impacts. We contacted the DOD
regarding any potential impacts of the
proposed critical habitat designation to
military operations. In a letter dated
June 3, 2013, the DOD Regional
Environmental Coordinator indicated
that no impacts on national security are
currently foreseen from the proposed
critical habitat designation. As a result,
we have not identified any direct
impacts from the critical habitat
designation on activities associated with
national security. We have preliminarily
concluded, subject to further
consideration based on public comment
or additional information from DOD,
that we will not exercise our
discretionary authority to exclude any
areas based on national security
impacts.
Other Relevant Impacts of Designation
Finally, under ESA section 4(b)(2) we
consider any other relevant impacts of
critical habitat designation to inform our
decision as to whether to exclude any
areas. For example, we may consider
potential adverse effects on existing
management plans or conservations
plans that benefit listed species, and we
may consider potential adverse effects
on tribal lands or trust resources. In
preparing this proposed designation, we
have not identified any such
management or conservation plans,
tribal lands or resources, or anything
else that would be adversely affected by
the proposed critical habitat
designation. Accordingly, we have
preliminarily concluded, subject to
further consideration based on public
comment, that we will not exercise our
discretionary authority to exclude any
areas based on other relevant impacts.
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Critical Habitat Designation
We propose to designate as critical
habitat one specific area of marine
habitat in Alaska and offshore Federal
waters of the northern Bering, Chukchi,
and Beaufort seas within the
geographical area presently occupied by
the Arctic ringed seal. This critical
habitat area contains physical or
biological features essential to the
conservation of Arctic ringed seals that
may require special management
considerations or protection. We have
not identified any unoccupied areas that
are essential to conservation of the
Arctic ringed seal and we are not
proposing any such areas for
designation as critical habitat. We are
not proposing to exclude any areas
based on economic impacts, impacts to
national security, or other relevant
impacts of the proposed designation. In
accordance with our regulations
regarding critical habitat designation (50
CFR 424.12(c)), the map we are
including in the proposed regulation, as
clarified by the accompanying
regulatory text, would constitute the
official boundary of the proposed
designation.
Effects of Critical Habitat Designation
Section 7(a)(2) of the ESA requires
Federal agencies, including NMFS, to
ensure that any action authorized,
funded, or carried out by the agency
does not jeopardize the continued
existence of any threatened or
endangered species or destroy or
adversely modify designated critical
habitat. Federal agencies must consult
with us on any action that may affect
listed species or critical habitat. During
the consultation, we evaluate the agency
action to determine whether the action
may adversely affect listed species or
critical habitat. If we conclude that the
agency action would likely result in the
destruction or adverse modification of
critical habitat, we would suggest
reasonable and prudent alternatives to
the action that avoid that result.
Regulations at 50 CFR 402.16 require
Federal agencies that have retained
discretionary involvement or control
over an action, or where such
discretionary involvement or control is
authorized by law, to reinitiate
consultation on previously reviewed
actions in instances where: (1) Critical
habitat is subsequently designated; or
(2) new information or changes to the
action may result in effects to critical
habitat not previously considered
(among other reasons for reinitiation).
Consequently, following designation of
critical habitat for Arctic ringed seals,
some Federal agencies may request
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reinitiation of consultation or
conference with us on actions for which
consultation has been completed, if
those actions may affect designated
critical habitat.
Section 4(c)(2) of the ESA directs the
Secretary to review the listing
classification of threatened and
endangered species, based on the best
available scientific information
concerning the species’ status, at least
once every 5 years. The ESA also
provides that NMFS may, from time-totime, revise critical habitat as new data
become available to the Secretary
(section 4(a)(3)(A)(ii)). Thus, new
information considered during a 5-year
review may also help inform future
consideration of whether the best
available information at that time
indicates revision of critical habitat may
be appropriate.
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Activities That May Be Affected by
Critical Habitat Designation
Section 4(b)(8) of the ESA requires
that we briefly describe and evaluate, in
any proposed or final regulation to
designate critical habitat, those
activities that may destroy or adversely
modify such habitat, or that may be
affected by such designation. A wide
variety of activities may affect the
proposed critical habitat for Arctic
ringed seals and, if carried out, funded,
or authorized by a Federal agency,
would require ESA section 7
consultation. Such activities or actions
include: In-water and coastal
construction; activities that generate
water pollution; dredging; commercial
fisheries; oil and gas exploration,
development, and production; oil spill
prevention and response; and certain
DOD activities. An evaluation of the
economic effects of ESA section 7
consultations regarding the proposed
critical habitat is provided in the draft
economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014)
and summarized above.
Public Comments Solicited
To ensure the final action resulting
from this proposal will be as accurate
and effective as possible, we solicit
comments and information from the
public, other concerned government
agencies, Alaska Native tribes and
organizations, the scientific community,
industry, and any other interested
parties concerning this proposed rule.
We particularly seek comments and
information concerning: (1) Habitat use
of Arctic ringed seals; (2) the
identification, location, and quality of
physical or biological features essential
to the conservation of Arctic ringed seal;
(3) the potential impacts of designating
the proposed critical habitat, including
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the types of Federal activities that may
trigger ESA section 7 consultation; (4)
current or planned activities in the area
proposed for designation and their
possible impacts on the proposed
critical habitat; (5) the potential effects
of the designation on Alaska Native
cultural practices and villages; (6) any
foreseeable economic, national security,
Tribal, or other relevant impacts
resulting from the proposed designation;
and (7) whether any particular areas that
we are proposing for critical habitat
designation should be considered for
exclusion under section 4(b)(2) of the
ESA and why. For these described
impacts or benefits, we request that the
following specific information (if
relevant) be provided to inform our ESA
section 4(b)(2) analysis: (1) A map and
description of the affected area; (2) a
description of the activities that may be
affected within the area; (3) a
description of past, ongoing, or future
conservation measures conducted
within the area that may protect Arctic
ringed seal habitat; and (4) a point of
contact. You may submit your
comments and information concerning
this proposed rule by any one of several
methods (see ADDRESSES). Copies of the
proposed rule and supporting
documentation, including the draft
economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014),
are available on the NMFS Alaska
Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov, from the
Federal eRulemaking Web site at https://
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20130114, or upon request (see ADDRESSES).
We will consider all comments and
information received during the
comment period for this proposed rule
in preparing the final rule. Accordingly,
the final decision may differ from this
proposed rule.
Information Quality Act and Peer
Review
On December 16, 2004, the OMB
issued a Final Information Quality
Bulletin for Peer Review (Bulletin)
establishing minimum peer review
standards, a transparent process for
public disclosure of peer review
planning, and opportunities for public
participation. The OMB Bulletin,
implemented under the Information
Quality Act (Pub. L. 106–554), is
intended to enhance the quality and
credibility of scientific information
disseminated by the Federal
government, and applies to influential
and highly influential scientific
information disseminated on or after
June 16, 2005. To satisfy our
requirements under the OMB Bulletin,
we are obtaining independent peer
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review of this proposed rule and the
draft economic report (Cardno Entrix,
2014), and will address all comments
received in developing the final rule
and the final version of the economic
report.
Classification
Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O.
12866)
The economic costs and benefits of
the proposed critical habitat designation
are described in our draft economic
report (i.e., RIR/4(b)(2) Preparatory
Analysis/IRFA; Cardno Entrix, 2014).
OMB has determined that this rule is
‘‘significant,’’ but not ‘‘economically
significant,’’ under E.O. 12866(3)(f).
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., as amended
by the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996), whenever an agency publishes a
notice of rulemaking for any proposed
or final rule, it must prepare and make
available for public comment a
regulatory flexibility analysis that
describes the effects of the rule on small
entities (i.e., small businesses, small
not-for-profit organizations, and small
government jurisdictions). We have
prepared an initial regulatory flexibility
act analysis (IRFA), which is included
as part of the draft economic report
(Cardno Entrix, 2014). The IRFA
estimates the potential number of small
businesses that may be directly
regulated by this proposed rule, and the
impact (incremental costs) per small
entity for a given activity type.
Specifically, based on an examination of
the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS), this
analysis classifies the economic
activities potentially directly regulated
by the proposed action into industry
sectors and provides an estimate of their
number in each sector, based on the
applicable NAICS codes. A summary of
the IRFA follows.
A description of the action (i.e.,
proposed designation of critical habitat),
why it is being considered, and its legal
basis are included in the preamble of
this proposed rule. This proposed action
does not impose new recordkeeping or
reporting requirements on small
entities. The analysis did not reveal any
Federal rules that duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with the proposed action.
Existing Federal laws and regulations
overlap with the proposed rule only to
the extent that they provide protection
to natural resources within the area
proposed as critical habitat generally.
However, no existing regulations
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specifically prohibit destruction or
adverse modification of critical habitat
for the Arctic ringed seal.
The regulatory mechanism through
which critical habitat protections are
enforced is section 7 of the ESA, which
directly regulates only those activities
carried out, funded, or permitted by a
Federal agency. By definition, Federal
agencies are not considered small
entities, although the activities they
fund or permit may be proposed or
carried out by small entities. In some
cases small entities may participate as
third parties during ESA section 7
consultations (the primary parties being
the Federal action agency and NMFS)
and thus they may be indirectly affected
by the proposed critical habitat
designation.
As detailed in the draft economic
report (Cardno Entrix, 2014), the oil and
gas exploration, development, and
production industries participate in
activities that are likely to require
consideration of critical habitat in ESA
section 7 consultations. The Small
Business Administration size standards
used to define small businesses in these
cases are: (1) An average of no more
than 500 employees (crude petroleum
and natural gas extraction industry); or
(2) average annual receipts of no more
than $35.5 million (support activities for
oil and has operations industry). No
independent not-for-profit enterprises
were identified that are likely to be
affected by the proposed critical habitat
designation. None of the parties
identified in the oil and gas category
appear to qualify as small businesses.
Two government jurisdictions with
ports appear to qualify as small
government jurisdictions (serving
populations of less than 50,000). Within
the 10-year analytical timeframe, one of
these two ports is expected to incur up
to $4,000 (discounted at 3 percent) in
total incremental consultation costs for
authorization of navigation dredging
activities, while the other is not
expected to incur any costs associated
with ESA section 7 consultations. This
cost represents less than 0.1 percent of
average annual receipts for this port.
We encourage small businesses, small
governmental jurisdictions, and other
small entities that may be affected
indirectly by this rule to provide
comment on the estimated number of
small entities likely to participate as
third parties during ESA section 7
consultations and the potential
economic impacts of the proposed
critical habitat designation, such as
anticipated costs of consultation and
potential project modifications, to
improve the RFA analysis.
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As required by the RFA (as amended
by the SBREFA), we considered various
alternatives to the proposed critical
habitat designation for the Arctic ringed
seal. We considered and rejected the
alternative of not designating critical
habitat for the Arctic ringed seal,
because such an alternative does not
meet the legal requirements of the ESA.
We considered an alternative under
which we would exercise discretion
pursuant to section 4(b)(2) of the ESA to
exclude certain areas, but we are not
proposing to do so: the 4(b)(2) analysis
identifies that there will be economic
impacts from this designation, but we
do not believe the benefits of excluding
any particular area outweigh the
benefits of inclusion. NMFS is seeking
comments on the 4(b)(2) analysis, and
all comments and information received
will be considered in developing our
final determination to designate critical
habitat for the Arctic ringed seal.
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
(E.O. 13211)
Executive Order 13211 requires
agencies to prepare Statements of
Energy Effects when undertaking any
action that promulgates or is expected to
lead to the promulgation of a final rule
or regulations that: (1) Is a significant
regulatory action under E.O. 12866, and
(2) is likely to have a significant adverse
effect on the supply, distribution, or use
of energy. We have considered the
potential impacts of this action on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy
(see Cardno Entrix, 2014). The proposed
critical habitat designation overlaps
with five BOEM planning areas for
Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas
leasing; however, the Beaufort and
Chukchi Sea planning areas are the only
areas with existing or planned leases.
Currently, the majority of oil and gas
production occurs on land adjacent to
the Beaufort Sea and the proposed
critical habitat area. Any proposed
offshore oil and gas projects likely
would have to undergo ESA section 7
consultations to ensure that the actions
are not likely to destroy or adversely
modify designated critical habitat.
However, as discussed in the draft
economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014),
such consultations will not result in any
new and significant effects on energy
supply, distribution, or use. ESA section
7 consultations have occurred for
numerous oil and gas projects within
the area of the proposed critical habitat
(e.g., relative to possible effects on
endangered bowhead whales, a species
without designated critical habitat)
without adversely affecting energy
supply, distribution, or use, and we
would expect the same relative to
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critical habitat for Arctic ringed seals.
We have, therefore, determined that the
energy effects of this proposed rule are
unlikely to exceed the impact
thresholds identified in E.O. 13211, and
that this proposed rulemaking is not a
significant energy action.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
In accordance with the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 et
seq.), we make the following findings:
1. This proposed rule will not
produce a Federal mandate. In general,
a Federal mandate is a provision in
legislation or regulation that would
impose an enforceable duty upon state,
local, tribal governments, or the private
sector and includes both ‘‘Federal
intergovernmental mandates’’ and
‘‘Federal private sector mandates.’’
These terms are defined in 2 U.S.C.
658(5)–(7). ‘‘Federal intergovernmental
mandate’’ includes a regulation that
‘‘would impose an enforceable duty
upon State, local, or tribal governments’’
with two exceptions. It excludes ‘‘a
condition of Federal assistance.’’ It also
excludes ‘‘a duty arising from
participation in a voluntary Federal
program,’’ unless the regulation ‘‘relates
to a then-existing Federal program
under which $500,000,000 or more is
provided annually to State, local, and
tribal governments under entitlement
authority,’’ if the provision would
‘‘increase the stringency of conditions of
assistance’’ or ‘‘place caps upon, or
otherwise decrease, the Federal
Government’s responsibility to provide
funding’’ and the state, local, or tribal
governments ‘‘lack authority’’ to adjust
accordingly.
‘‘Federal private sector mandate’’
includes a regulation that ‘‘would
impose an enforceable duty upon the
private sector, except (i) a condition of
Federal assistance; or (ii) a duty arising
from participation in a voluntary
Federal program.’’ The designation of
critical habitat does not impose a legally
binding duty on non-Federal
government entities or private parties.
Under the ESA, the only regulatory
effect is that Federal agencies must
ensure that their actions do not destroy
or adversely modify critical habitat
under section 7. While non-Federal
entities who receive Federal funding,
assistance, permits, or otherwise require
approval or authorization from a Federal
agency for an action may be indirectly
impacted by the designation of critical
habitat, the legally binding duty to
avoid destruction or adverse
modification of critical habitat rests
squarely on the Federal action agency.
Furthermore, to the extent that nonFederal entities are indirectly impacted,
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because they receive a Federal permit or
Federal assistance or participate in a
voluntary Federal aid program, the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act would
not apply, nor would critical habitat
shift the costs of the large entitlement
programs listed above to State
governments.
2. This rule will not significantly or
uniquely affect small governments,
because it will not produce a Federal
mandate of $100 million or greater in
any year; that is, it is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ under the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act. The proposed
critical habitat designation falls within
marine waters under Federal or State of
Alaska jurisdiction. The State of Alaska
does not fit the definition of a ‘‘small
governmental jurisdiction’’ and thus a
Small Government Agency Plan is not
required. Waters adjacent to Nativeowned lands are owned and managed
by the State of Alaska.
Takings (E.O. 12630)
Under E.O. 12630, Federal agencies
must consider the effects of their actions
on constitutionally protected private
property rights and avoid unnecessary
takings of property. A taking of property
includes actions that result in physical
invasion or occupancy of private
property, and regulations imposed on
private property that substantially affect
its value or use. In accordance with E.O.
12630, this proposed rule does not have
significant takings implications. A
takings implication assessment is not
required. The designation of critical
habitat affects only Federal agency
actions. Private lands do not exist
within the proposed critical habitat and
would not be affected by this action.
Federalism (E.O. 13132)
In accordance with E.O. 13132
(Federalism), we determined that this
proposed rule does not have significant
Federalism effects and that a Federalism
assessment is not required.
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Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
This proposed rule does not contain
new or revised information collections
that require approval by OMB under the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq.). This proposed rule will
not impose recordkeeping or reporting
requirements on state or local
governments, individuals, businesses, or
organizations.
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
Environmental analysis under NEPA
for ESA critical habitat designations is
not required. See Douglas County v.
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Babbitt, 48 F.3d 1495 (9th Cir. 1995),
cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 698 (1996).
Government-to-Government
Relationship With Tribes
The longstanding and distinctive
relationship between the Federal and
tribal governments is defined by
treaties, statutes, executive orders,
judicial decisions, and co-management
agreements, which differentiate tribal
governments from the other entities that
deal with, or are affected by, the Federal
Government. This relationship has
given rise to a special Federal trust
responsibility involving the legal
responsibilities and obligations of the
United States toward Indian tribes and
the application of fiduciary standards of
due care with respect to Indian lands,
tribal trust resources, and the exercise of
tribal rights. Executive Order 13175 on
Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments outlines the
responsibilities of the Federal
Government in matters affecting tribal
interests. Section 161 of Public Law
108–199 (188 Stat. 452), as amended by
section 518 of Public Law 108–447 (118
Stat. 3267), directs all Federal agencies
to consult with Alaska Native
corporations on the same basis as Indian
tribes under E.O. 13175.
As the entire proposed critical habitat
area is located seaward of the coast line
of Alaska, no tribal-owned lands overlap
with the proposed designation.
However, this proposed designation
overlaps with areas used by Alaska
Natives for subsistence, cultural, and
other purposes. We coordinate with
Alaska Native hunters regarding
management issues related to ice seals
through the Ice Seal Committee (ISC), a
co-management organization under
section 119 of the Marine Mammal
Protection Act. NMFS discussed the
designation of critical habitat for Arctic
ringed seals with the ISC and provided
updates regarding the timeline for
publication of this proposed rule. We
also contacted potentially affected tribes
by mail and offered them the
opportunity to consult on the
designation of critical habitat for the
Arctic ringed seal and discuss any
concerns they may have. We received
no requests for consultation in response
to this mailing. If we receive any such
requests in response to this proposed
rule, we will respond to each request
prior to issuing a final rule.
References Cited
A complete list of all references cited
in this rulemaking can be found on the
NMFS Alaska Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov and is
available upon request from the NMFS
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71727
office in Juneau, Alaska (see
ADDRESSES).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 226
Endangered and threatened species.
Dated: November 21, 2014.
Samuel. D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, we propose to amend 50 CFR
part 226 as follows:
PART 226—DESIGNATED CRITICAL
HABITAT
1. The authority citation for part 226
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1533.
2. A new § 226.226 is added to read
as follows:
■
§ 226.226 Critical Habitat for the Arctic
Subspecies (Phoca hispida hispida) of the
Ringed Seal (Phoca hispida).
Critical habitat is designated for the
Arctic subspecies of the ringed seal as
depicted in the map below and
described in paragraph (a) of this
section. Textual information is included
for the purposes of clarifying or refining
the location and boundaries of the
critical habitat area.
(a) Critical habitat boundaries.
Critical habitat includes all the
contiguous marine waters from the
‘‘coast line’’ of Alaska as that term has
been defined in the Submerged Lands
Act (‘‘the line of ordinary low water
along that portion of the coast which is
in direct contact with the open sea and
the line marking the seaward limit of
inland waters’’), 43 U.S.C. 1301(c), to an
offshore limit within the U.S. Exclusive
Economic Zone (EEZ). The boundary
extends offshore from the northern limit
of the United States-Canada land border
(from the ordinary low water line of the
Beaufort Sea at 141° W. long.) and
follows the outer extent of the U.S. EEZ
boundary north and slightly
northeastward; thence westerly and
southwesterly; thence southerly and
southwesterly to 60°31′ N. lat., 179°13′
W. long. From there it runs
southeasterly to 58°22′ N. lat., 170°27′
W. long.; thence easterly to 59° N. lat.,
164° W. long. The boundary then
follows 164° W. long. due north to the
coast line of Alaska southeast of Cape
Avinof. Critical habitat does not include
permanent manmade structures such as
boat ramps, docks, or pilings that were
in existence on or before the effective
date of this rule.
(b) Essential features. The essential
features for the conservation of the
Arctic ringed seal are:
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(1) Sea ice habitat suitable for the
formation and maintenance of
subnivean birth lairs used for sheltering
pups during whelping and nursing,
which is defined as seasonal landfast
(shorefast) ice, or dense, stable pack ice,
that has undergone deformation and
contains snowdrifts at least 54 cm deep.
(2) Sea ice habitat suitable as a
platform for basking and molting, which
is defined as sea ice of 15 percent or
more concentration.
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(3) Primary prey resources to support
Arctic ringed seals, which are defined to
be Arctic cod, saffron cod, shrimps, and
amphipods.
(c) Critical habitat map. The proposed
critical habitat boundary was mapped
using an Alaska Albers Equal Area
Conic projection referenced to the North
American Datum of 1983 (NAD83). The
map, as clarified by the accompanying
regulatory text, establishes the
boundaries of the critical habitat
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designation. The map, along with the
coordinates or plot points on which the
map is based, is available to the public
on https://www.regulations.gov at Docket
No. NOAA–NMFS–2013–0114, on the
NMFS Alaska region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov, and at the
NMFS office in Juneau, Alaska. The
map of critical habitat for the Arctic
ringed seal follows:
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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[FR Doc. 2014–28229 Filed 12–2–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–C
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 140724618–4618–01]
RIN 0648–BE41
Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Revisions to
Charter Halibut Fisheries Management
in Alaska
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS proposes regulations
that would revise Federal regulations
regarding sport fishing guide services
for Pacific halibut in International
Pacific Halibut Commission Regulatory
Areas 2C (Southeast Alaska) and 3A
(Central Gulf of Alaska). The proposed
regulations would remove the
requirement that a guided sport (charter)
vessel guide be on board the same vessel
as a charter vessel angler to provide
sport fishing guide services. This
proposed rule would clarify that all
sport fishing for halibut in which
anglers receive assistance from a
compensated guide would be managed
under charter fishery regulations, and
all harvest would accrue toward charter
allocations. This proposed rule would
align Federal regulations with State of
Alaska regulations. Additional minor
changes to the regulatory text pertaining
to the charter halibut fishery would be
required to maintain consistency in the
regulations with these new definitions.
This action is necessary to achieve the
halibut fishery management goals of the
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be received no
later than January 2, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by NOAA–NMFS–2014–0097,
by any of the following methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal. Go to
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20140097, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
Glenn Merrill, Assistant Regional
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DATES:
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Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries
Division, Alaska Region NMFS, Attn:
Ellen Sebastian. Mail comments to P.O.
Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802–1668.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on https://www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publicly accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter N/
A in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous). Attachments to
electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word or Excel or Adobe PDF
file formats only.
Electronic copies of the Categorical
Exclusion and the Regulatory Impact
Review/Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (RIR/IRFA) prepared for this
action are available from https://
www.regulations.gov or from the NMFS
Alaska Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this rule may
be submitted to NMFS at the above
address and by email to OIRA_
Submission@omb.eop.gov or fax to 202–
395–7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Julie
Scheurer, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC) and NMFS manage
fishing for Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis) through regulations
established under authority of the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982
(Halibut Act). The IPHC adopts
regulations governing the Pacific halibut
fishery under the Convention between
the United States and Canada for the
Preservation of the Halibut Fishery of
the North Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea
(Convention), signed at Ottawa, Ontario,
on March 2, 1953, as amended by a
Protocol Amending the Convention
(signed at Washington, DC, on March
29, 1979). For the United States,
regulations developed by the IPHC are
subject to acceptance by the Secretary of
State with concurrence from the
Secretary of Commerce. After
acceptance by the Secretary of State and
the Secretary of Commerce, NMFS
publishes the IPHC regulations in the
Federal Register as annual management
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71729
measures pursuant to 50 CFR 300.62.
The final rule implementing IPHC
regulations for the 2014 fishing season
was published March 12, 2014 (79 FR
13906). IPHC regulations affecting sport
fishing for halibut and vessels in the
charter fishery in Areas 2C and 3A may
be found in sections 3, 25, and 28 of that
final rule.
The Halibut Act, at sections 773c(a)
and (b), provides the Secretary of
Commerce with general responsibility to
carry out the Convention and the
Halibut Act. In adopting regulations that
may be necessary to carry out the
purposes and objectives of the
Convention and the Halibut Act, the
Secretary of Commerce is directed to
consult with the Secretary of the
department in which the U.S. Coast
Guard is operating, currently the
Department of Homeland Security.
The Halibut Act, at section 773c(c),
also provides the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) with
authority to develop regulations,
including limited access regulations,
that are in addition to, and not in
conflict with, approved IPHC
regulations. Regulations developed by
the Council may be implemented by
NMFS only after approval by the
Secretary of Commerce. The Council has
exercised this authority in the
development of subsistence halibut
fishery management measures, and
sport halibut fishery management
measures in waters in and off Alaska,
codified at 50 CFR 300.61, 300.65,
300.66, and 300.67. The Council also
developed the Individual Fishing Quota
Program for the commercial halibut
fishery, codified at 50 CFR part 679,
under the authority of section 773 of the
Halibut Act and section 303(b) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (16
U.S.C. 1801 et seq.).
Background
The proposed rule would align
Federal regulations for charter halibut
fishing with State of Alaska regulations
for sport fishing to clarify the Council’s
and NMFS’ intent for management of
charter halibut fisheries in Areas 2C and
3A off Alaska. The proposed regulatory
clarifications also would facilitate
enforcement and clarify recordkeeping
and reporting requirements for the
charter halibut fishery. The proposed
rule would not revise regulations for
unguided sport halibut fishing in Alaska
found in sections 3, 25, and 28 of the
IPHC annual management measures
(March 12, 2014, 79 FR 13906). The
following sections of this preamble
provide (1) a description of the halibut
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 232 (Wednesday, December 3, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 71714-71729]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-28229]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 226
[Docket No. 120912447-4278-01]
RIN 0648-BC56
Endangered and Threatened Species; Designation of Critical
Habitat for the Arctic Ringed Seal
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, NMFS, propose to designate critical habitat for the Arctic
subspecies (Phoca hispida hispida) of the ringed seal (Phoca hispida)
under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). We propose to designate one
specific area of marine habitat in the northern Bering, Chukchi, and
Beaufort seas. We are soliciting comments from the public on all
aspects of the proposal, including our identification and consideration
of the economic, national security, and other relevant impacts of the
proposed designation.
DATES: Comments on this proposed rule must be received by March 3,
2015. Four public hearings on the proposed rule will be held in Alaska
(Anchorage, Barrow, Kotzebue, and Nome). The dates and times of these
hearings will be provided in a subsequent Federal Register notice.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this document, identified by FDMS
Docket Number NOAA-NMFS-2013-0114, by any one of the following methods:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2013-0114, click the
``Comment Now!'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or
attach your comments.
Mail: Address written comments to Jon Kurland, Assistant
Regional Administrator for Protected Resources, Alaska Region NMFS,
Attn: Ellen Sebastian. Mail comments to P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
99802-1668.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on https://www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily
by the sender will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous
comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous). Attachments to electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF file formats only.
Electronic copies of the proposed rule, list of references and
supporting documents, and the draft economic report (i.e., Regulatory
Impact Review (RIR)/4(b)(2) Preparatory Assessment/
[[Page 71715]]
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act (IRFA) report) prepared for this
action are available from https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2013-0114 or from the NMFS Alaska Region Web
site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tamara Olson, NMFS Alaska Region,
(907) 271-5006; Jon Kurland, NMFS Alaska Region, (907) 586-7638; or
Marta Nammack, NMFS Office of Protected Resources, (301) 427-8469.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On December 28, 2012, we published a final rule to list the Arctic
ringed seal as threatened under the ESA (77 FR 76706). Section
4(b)(6)(C) of the ESA requires the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) to
designate critical habitat concurrently with making a determination to
list a species as threatened or endangered unless it is not
determinable at that time, in which case the Secretary may extend the
deadline for this designation by 1 year. At the time of listing, we
announced our intention to designate critical habitat for the Arctic
ringed seal in separate rulemaking, as sufficient information was not
available to: (1) Identify and describe the physical and biological
features essential to the conservation of the Arctic ringed seal; and
(2) assess the economic consequences of designating critical habitat
for the Arctic ringed seal. At that time, we also solicited comments
related to identification of critical habitat during a 60-day comment
period. We received nine comment submissions in response to this
solicitation. Subsequently we researched, reviewed, and compiled the
best available scientific and commercial data available, including the
public comments received to date, to develop a critical habitat
proposal for the Arctic ringed seal. We used these data to identify the
physical and biological features essential to the conservation of the
Arctic ringed seal, specific areas that we are proposing as critical
habitat for the Arctic ringed seal, and the impacts associated with the
proposed designation.
This proposed rule would designate critical habitat for the Arctic
ringed seal pursuant to section 4(b)(2) of the ESA. Critical habitat is
defined by section 3 of the ESA as: ``(i) The specific areas within the
geographical area occupied by the species, at the time it is listed . .
., on which are found those physical or biological features (I)
essential to the conservation of the species and (II) which may require
special management considerations or protection; and (ii) specific
areas outside the geographical area occupied by the species at the time
it is listed . . . upon a determination by the Secretary that such
areas are essential for the conservation of the species.'' Section 3 of
the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1532(3)) also defines the terms ``conserve,''
``conserving,'' and ``conservation'' to mean: ``to use, and the use of,
all methods and procedures that are necessary to bring any endangered
species or threatened species to the point at which the measures
provided pursuant to this chapter are no longer necessary.'' Critical
habitat cannot be designated in areas outside U.S. jurisdiction (50 CFR
424.12(h)).
Section 4(b)(2) of the ESA and our implementing regulations require
that, before designating critical habitat, we consider the economic,
national security, and other relevant impacts of the designation. The
Secretary has discretion to exclude any particular area from the
critical habitat if she determines that the benefits of exclusion
outweigh the benefits of designation. The Secretary, however, may not
exclude a particular area if the failure to designate that area as
critical habitat would result in the extinction of the species.
Once critical habitat is designated, section 7(a)(2) of the ESA
requires Federal agencies to ensure they do not fund, authorize, or
carry out any actions that will destroy or adversely modify that
habitat. This requirement is additional to the section 7 requirement
that Federal agencies ensure their actions do not jeopardize the
continued existence of listed species.
This proposed rule describes information on Arctic ringed seal
biology, distribution, and habitat use, the methods used to develop the
proposed designation, and our proposal to designate critical habitat
for the Arctic ringed seal.
Arctic Ringed Seal Biology and Habitat Use
The following discussion of the natural history and ecology of
Arctic ringed seals as it relates to habitat use is based on the best
scientific and commercial data available, including information in the
status review report for the ringed seal (Kelly et al., 2010a). In this
proposed rule, we focus on those aspects directly relevant to the
designation of critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal. For more
detailed information on the biology and habitat use of ringed seals,
refer to the status review report and the proposed and final listing
rules (75 FR 77476, December 10, 2010; 77 FR 76706, December 28, 2012).
The Arctic ringed seal is the smallest of the northern seals, with
typical adult body size of 1.5 m in length and 70 kg in weight. Arctic
ringed seal females generally reach sexual maturity at 3 to 6 years of
age, and males at 5 to 7 years of age, but with geographic and temporal
variability depending on animal condition and population structure. The
average life span of Arctic ringed seals is about 15 to 28 years.
Seasonal Distribution and Habitat Use
Arctic ringed seals are circumpolar and are found throughout ice-
covered waters of the Arctic Basin and southward into adjacent seas,
including the Bering and Labrador seas. In the United States, ringed
seals occur in the Beaufort, Chukchi, and Bering seas off Alaska's
coast, as far south as Bristol Bay in years of extensive ice coverage
(King, 1964; Frost and Lowry, 1981; Frost, 1985; Kelly, 1988; Rice,
1998).
Ringed seals are adapted to remaining in heavily ice-covered areas
throughout the fall, winter, and spring by using the stout claws on
their foreflippers to maintain breathing holes in the ice. Arctic
ringed seals do not normally come ashore, but instead use sea ice as a
substrate for resting, whelping (birthing), nursing, and molting
(shedding and regrowing hair and outer skin layers). The seasonality of
ice cover strongly influences Arctic ringed seal movements, foraging,
reproductive behavior, and vulnerability to predation. Kelly et al.
(2010b) referred to three time periods important to Arctic ringed seal
seasonal movements and habitat use: The winter through early spring
``subnivean period'' when the seals rest primarily in subnivean lairs
(snow caves on top of the ice); the late spring to early summer
``basking period'' between abandonment of the lairs and melting of the
seasonal sea ice when the seals undergo their annual molt; and the
open-water ``foraging period'' when feeding occurs most intensively
during late summer through fall.
Subnivean Period: With the advance of winter, many Arctic ringed
seals that summer in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas are thought to move
generally west and south with the advancing ice, while others remain in
the Beaufort Sea (Frost, 1985). Adult movements during the subnivean
period have been reported as typically limited, especially where ice
cover is extensive, likely due to maintenance of breathing holes and
social behavior during the breeding season (Kelly and Quakenbush, 1990;
Kelly et al., 2010b; Crawford et al.,
[[Page 71716]]
2012). In contrast, subadult Arctic ringed seals have been observed to
travel relatively long distances in winter to near the ice edge in the
Bering Sea (Crawford et al., 2012).
At freeze up in the fall, ringed seals surface to breathe in the
remaining open water of cracks and leads. As these openings in the ice
freeze over, the seals push through the ice to breathe until it is too
thick (Lukin and Potelov, 1978). They then open breathing holes by
abrading the ice with the claws on their foreflippers (Bailey and
Hendee, 1926; Smith and Stirling, 1975). As the ice thickens, the seals
continue to maintain the breathing holes by scratching at the walls. As
snow accumulates and buries the breathing hole, the seals breathe
through the snow layer. Ringed seals excavate lairs in the snow above
breathing holes where snow depth is sufficient (Chapskii, 1940;
McLaren, 1958; Smith and Stirling, 1975). These subnivean lairs are
occupied for resting, whelping, and nursing young in areas of annual
landfast (shorefast) ice (McLaren, 1958; Burns, 1970) and stable pack
ice (Finley et al., 1983; Wiig et al., 1999; Bengtson et al., 2005)
that has undergone a low to moderate amount of deformation and where
pressure ridges or ice hummocks have caused snow to form drifts of
sufficient depth (Smith and Stirling, 1975; Lydersen and Gjertz, 1986;
Kelly, 1988; Furgal et al., 1996; Lydersen, 1998).
Females give birth to a single pup in their lairs during mid-March
through April (Kelly et al., 2010a) and the pups are nursed in the
lairs for an average of 39 days (Hammill et al., 1991). Females
continue to forage throughout lactation while making frequent visits to
birth lairs (Hammill, 1987; Kelly and Wartzok, 1996; Simpkins et al.,
2001). The pups develop foraging skills prior to weaning (Lydersen and
Hammill, 1993), and are normally weaned before break-up of spring ice.
Lairs provide protection from cold and predators throughout the
winter months, but they are especially important for protecting newborn
ringed seals. Lairs conceal ringed seals from predators, an advantage
especially important to the small pups that start life with minimal
tolerance for immersion in cold water (Smith et al., 1991). Polar bears
prey heavily on ringed seals. Other predators include Arctic foxes,
common ravens, and glaucous gulls. Pups in lairs with thin snow cover
are more vulnerable to polar bear predation than pups in lairs with
thick snow cover (Hammill and Smith, 1989; Ferguson et al., 2005). For
example, Hammill and Smith (1991) noted that polar bear predation on
ringed seal pups increased 4-fold in a year when average snow depths in
their study area decreased from 23 to 10 cm. When ringed seal pups are
forced out of subnivean lairs prematurely because of low snow
accumulation and/or early melts, gulls and ravens can also successfully
prey on them (Kumlien, 1879; Gjertz and Lydersen, 1983; Lydersen and
Gjertz, 1987; Lydersen et al., 1987; Lydersen and Smith, 1989; Lydersen
and Ryg, 1990; Lydersen, 1998). Stirling and Smith (2004) surmised that
most pups that survived exposure to cold after their subnivean lairs
collapsed during unseasonal rains were eventually killed by polar
bears, Arctic foxes, or gulls.
Subnivean lairs also provide refuge from air temperatures too low
for survival of ringed seal pups. When forced to flee into the water to
avoid predators, the ringed seal pups that survive depend on the
subnivean lairs to subsequently warm themselves. When snow cover is
insufficient, pups can freeze in their lairs, as documented when roofs
of lairs in the White Sea were only 5 to 10 cm thick (Lukin and
Potelov, 1978). Stirling and Smith (2004) also documented exposure of
ringed seals to hypothermia following the collapse of subnivean lairs
during unseasonal rains near southeastern Baffin Island.
During winter and spring, Arctic ringed seals are found throughout
the Chukchi and Beaufort seas; and in the Bering Sea, surveys indicate
that ringed seals use nearly the entire ice field over the Bering Sea
shelf. During an exceptionally high ice year (1976), Braham et al.
(1984) found ringed seals present in the southeastern Bering Sea north
of the Pribilof Islands to outer Bristol Bay, primarily north of the
ice front. But they noted that most of these seals were likely immature
or nonbreeding animals. Frost (1985) indicated that ringed seals
``occur as far south as Nunivak Island and Bristol Bay, depending on
ice conditions in a particular year, but generally are not abundant
south of Norton Sound except in nearshore areas.'' However, recent
surveys conducted in the Bering Sea during spring have documented
ringed seals in both nearshore and offshore habitat including south of
Norton Sound, AK (National Marine Mammal Laboratory, 2012, unpublished
data). Crawford et al. (2012) reported that the adult ringed seals
tagged in Kotzebue Sound, AK, remained in the Chukchi Sea and the
northern Bering Sea north of St. Lawrence Island during winter and
spring. However, movement data for ringed seals tagged near Barrow, AK,
indicated that some adults over-wintered farther south toward the shelf
break in the Bering Sea (North Slope Borough, 2012, unpublished data).
Finally, harvest of ringed seal pups by hunters in Quinhagak, Alaska
(Coffing et al., 1998) suggests that some ringed seals may whelp south
of Nunivak Island.
Basking Period: Numbers of ringed seals hauled out on the surface
of the ice typically begin to increase during spring as the
temperatures warm and the snow covering the seals' lairs melts.
Although the snow cover can melt rapidly, the ice remains largely
intact and serves as a substrate for annual molting, during which time
seals spend many hours basking in the sun (Smith, 1973; Smith and
Hammill, 1981; Finley, 1979; Kelly and Quakenbush, 1990; Kelly et al.,
2010b). Adults generally molt from mid-May to mid-July (McLaren, 1958),
although there is regional variation. Kelly and Quakenbush (1990)
reported that in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas, most seals begin
basking in late May or early June. Usually the largest numbers of
basking seals are observed in June (McLaren, 1958; Smith, 1973; Finley,
1979; Smith et al., 1979; Smith and Hammill, 1981; Moulton et al.,
2002).
The relatively long periods of time that ringed seals spend out of
the water during the molt (Smith, 1973; Smith and Hammill, 1981; Kelly
et al., 2010b) have been ascribed to the need to maintain elevated skin
temperatures during new hair growth (Feltz and Fay, 1966; Kelly and
Quakenbush, 1990). Higher skin temperatures are facilitated by basking
on the ice and this may accelerate shedding and regrowth of hair and
skin (Feltz and Fay, 1966). Feeding is reduced and the seal's
metabolism declines during the molt (Ashwell-Erickson et al., 1986). As
seals complete this phase of the annual pelage cycle and the seasonal
sea ice melts during the summer, ringed seals spend increasing amounts
of time in the water feeding (Kelly et al., 2010b).
Open-Water Foraging Period: Most Arctic ringed seals that winter in
the Bering and Chukchi seas are thought to migrate northward in spring
with the receding ice edge and spend summer in the pack ice of the
northern Chukchi and Beaufort seas (Burns, 1970; Frost, 1985). Arctic
ringed seals are also dispersed in ice-free areas of the Bering,
Chukchi, and Beaufort seas during the open-water period. Overall, the
record from satellite tracking indicates that Arctic ringed seals
breeding in landfast ice practice one of two strategies during the
open-water foraging period (Freitas et al., 2008). Some seals forage
within 100 km of their landfast ice breeding habitat, while others make
extensive
[[Page 71717]]
movements of hundreds or thousands of kilometers to forage in highly
productive areas and along the pack ice edge. Movements during the
open-water foraging period by Arctic ringed seals that breed in the
pack ice are unknown. High- quality, abundant food is important to the
annual energy budgets of ringed seals. Ringed seals typically lose a
significant proportion of their blubber mass during the spring to early
summer and then replenish their blubber reserves by increasing feeding
during late summer, fall, and winter.
Diet
Arctic ringed seals eat a wide variety of prey spanning several
trophic levels; however, most prey is small and preferred fishes tend
to be schooling species that form dense aggregations. Ringed seals
rarely prey upon more than 10 to 15 species in any specific
geographical location, and not more than 2 to 4 of those species are
considered important prey. Despite regional and seasonal variations in
the diets of Arctic ringed seals, fishes of the cod family tend to
dominate their diet in many areas from late autumn through early
spring. Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida) is often reported to be among the
most important prey species, especially during the ice-covered periods
of the year. Crustaceans appear to become more important in many areas
during the open water season, and are often found to dominate the diets
of young ringed seals.
Critical Habitat Identification
In the following sections, we describe the relevant definitions and
requirements in the ESA, and our implementing regulations, and the key
information and criteria used to prepare this proposed critical habitat
designation. In accordance with section 4(b)(2) of the ESA and our
implementing regulations at 50 CFR part 424, this proposed critical
habitat designation is based on the best scientific data available. Our
primary sources of information are the NMFS status review report for
the ringed seal (Kelly et al., 2010a) and the proposed and final rules
to list four subspecies of the ringed seals, including the Arctic
ringed seal (75 FR 77476, December 10, 2010; 77 FR 76706, December 28,
2012). Additional information sources include articles in peer-reviewed
journals, other scientific reports, and relevant Geographic Information
System (GIS) data (such as shoreline, maritime limits and boundaries,
and sea ice extent) for area calculations and mapping.
We followed a five-step process to identify specific areas that may
qualify as critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal: (1) Determine
the geographical area occupied by the species; (2) identify physical or
biological habitat features essential to the conservation of the
species; (3) delineate specific areas within the geographical area
occupied by the species on which are found the physical or biological
features; (4) determine whether the features in a specific area may
require special management considerations or protection; and (5)
determine whether any unoccupied areas are essential for conservation.
Our evaluation and conclusions are described in detail in the following
sections.
Geographical Area Occupied by the Species
The range of the Arctic ringed seal was identified in the final ESA
listing rule (77 FR 76706; December 28, 2012) as the Arctic Ocean and
adjacent seas, except west of 157[deg] E. long. (the Kamchatka
Peninsula), where the Okhotsk subspecies of the ringed seal occurs, or
in the Baltic Sea where the Baltic subspecies of the ringed seal is
found. As noted above, we cannot designate areas outside U.S.
jurisdiction as critical habitat. Thus, the geographical area under
consideration for this designation is limited to areas under the
jurisdiction of the United States that Arctic ringed seals actually
occupied at the time of listing. This area extends to the outer
boundary of the U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) in the Chukchi and
Beaufort seas, and south into the Bering Sea, as far south as Bristol
Bay in years with extensive ice coverage (Kelly et al., 2010a). We
consider the shoreward extent of this area to be the ``coast line'' of
Alaska as that term has been defined in the Submerged Lands Act (``the
line of ordinary low water along that portion of the coast which is in
direct contact with the open sea and the line marking the seaward limit
of inland waters''), 43 U.S.C. 1301(c).
Physical or Biological Features Essential to the Conservation of the
Species
Implementing regulations at 50 CFR 424.12(b) state that in
determining what areas are critical habitat, the Secretary ``shall
consider those physical and biological features that are essential to
the conservation of a given species and that may require special
management considerations or protection.'' These features may include:
``(1) Space for individual and population growth, and for normal
behavior; (2) Food, water, air, light, minerals, or other nutritional
or physiological requirements; (3) Cover or shelter; (4) Sites for
breeding, reproduction, rearing of offspring, germination, or seed
dispersal; and generally: (5) Habitats that are protected from
disturbance or are representative of the historic geographical and
ecological distributions of a species.'' The regulations further state
the Secretary shall ``focus on the principal biological or physical
constituent elements within the defined area that are essential to the
conservation of the species. Known primary constituent elements shall
be listed with the critical habitat description. Primary constituent
elements may include the following: Roost sites, nesting grounds,
spawning sites, feeding sites, seasonal wetland or dryland, water
quality or quantity, host species or plant pollinator, geological
formation, vegetation type, tide, and specific soil types.'' For the
purposes of this proposed rule, the essential features identified are
the same as primary constituent elements. Based on the best scientific
information available on the physical and biological features and
habitat characteristics required to sustain its life history functions,
we have determined that the following features are essential to the
conservation of the Arctic ringed seal in the United States.
1. Sea ice habitat suitable for the formation and maintenance of
subnivean birth lairs used for sheltering pups during whelping and
nursing, which is defined as seasonal landfast (shorefast) ice, or
dense, stable pack ice, that has undergone deformation and contains
snowdrifts at least 54 cm deep.
Sea ice habitat suitable for the formation and maintenance of
subnivean birth lairs used for sheltering pups during whelping and
nursing is essential to conservation of the Arctic ringed seal because
as discussed above, without the protection of lairs, ringed seal pups
are more vulnerable to freezing and predation.
Snowdrifts of sufficient depth for birth lair formation and
maintenance typically occur in deformed ice where drifting has taken
place along pressure ridges or ice hummocks (Smith and Stirling, 1975;
Lydersen and Gjertz, 1986; Kelly, 1988; Furgal et al., 1996; Lydersen,
1998). For purposes of assessing potential impacts of projected changes
in April Northern Hemisphere snow conditions on ringed seals, Kelly et
al. (2010a) considered 20 cm to be the minimum average snow depth
required on areas of flat ice to form drifts of sufficient depth to
support birth lair formation. Further, Kelly et al. (2010a, p. 109)
discussed that ringed seals require snow drift depths of 50 to 65 cm or
more to support birth lair formation. To identify a snow drift depth
criterion
[[Page 71718]]
for sea ice habitat that we consider essential for Arctic ringed seal
birth lair formation and maintenance, we derived a specific depth
threshold as follows. At least seven studies have reported minimum
snowdrift depth measurements at Arctic ringed seal birth lairs
(typically measured near the center of the lairs or over the breathing
holes) off the coasts of Alaska (Kelly et al., 1986; Frost and Burns,
1989), the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (Smith and Stirling, 1975;
Kelly, 1988; Furgal et al., 1996), Svalbard (Lydersen and Gjertz,
1986), and in the White Sea (Lukin and Potelov, 1978). The average
minimum snowdrift depth at birth lairs was 54 cm across all of the
studies combined, and 64 cm in the Alaska studies only. The average
from studies in Alaska is based on data from fewer years over a shorter
time span than from all studies combined (3 years during 1982-1984
versus 11 years during 1971-1993, respectively); consequently, the
Alaska-specific average is more likely to be biased if an anomalous
weather pattern occurred during its more limited timeframe. For this
reason, we conclude that the average minimum snowdrift depth based on
all studies combined (54 cm) provides the best estimate of the minimum
snowdrift depth that is essential for birth lairs.
Although Arctic ringed seals appear to favor landfast ice as
whelping habitat, ringed seal whelping has also been observed on both
nearshore and offshore drifting pack ice. As Reeves (1998) noted,
nearly all research on Arctic ringed seal reproduction has been
conducted in landfast ice, and the potential importance of stable but
drifting pack ice has not been adequately investigated. Studies in the
Barents Sea (Wiig et al., 1999) and Baffin Bay (Finley et al., 1983)
have documented pup production in pack ice, and Smith and Stirling
(1975), citing unpublished data from the ``Western Arctic'' (presumably
the Canadian Beaufort Sea), indicated that ``the offshore areas of
shifting but relatively stable ice are an important part of the
breeding habitat.'' Lentfer (1972) reported ``a significant amount of
ringed seal denning and pupping on moving heavy pack ice north of
Barrow.'' Arctic ringed seal vocalizations detected throughout the
winter and spring in long-term autonomous acoustic recordings collected
along the shelf break north-northwest of Barrow also suggest that some
ringed seals overwinter and breed in offshore pack ice (Jones et al.,
in press). We therefore conclude that the best scientific information
available indicates that sea ice habitat essential for construction and
maintenance of birth lairs includes areas of both shorefast ice and
dense, stable pack ice that contain snowdrifts of sufficient depths,
i.e., 54 cm.
2. Sea ice habitat suitable as a platform for basking and molting,
which is defined as sea ice of 15 percent or more concentration.
Sea ice habitat suitable as a platform for basking and molting is
essential to conservation of the Arctic ringed seal because molting is
a biologically-important, energy-intensive process that could incur
increased energetic costs if it were to occur in water, or increased
risk of predation if it were to occur on land. Moreover, we are unaware
of any studies establishing whether Arctic ringed seals can molt
successfully in water, or reports of healthy Arctic ringed seals
basking on land (they are known to come ashore when sick). If Arctic
ringed seals were unable to successfully complete their annual molt,
they would be at increased risk from parasites and disease.
During their annual molt, Arctic ringed seals transition from lair
use to basking on the surface of the ice for long periods of time near
breathing holes, lairs, or cracks in the ice. There are limited data
available on ice concentrations (percentage of ocean surface covered by
sea ice) favored by Arctic ringed seals during the basking period, in
particular for the time period following ice breakup. Although a number
of studies have reported an apparent preference for consolidated stable
ice (i.e., landfast ice and consolidated pack ice), at least during the
initial weeks of the basking period, some of these studies have also
reported observations of Arctic ringed seals hauled out at low
densities in unconsolidated ice (e.g., Stirling et al., 1982; Kingsley
et al., 1985; Lunn et al., 1997; Chambellant et al., 2012). Arctic
ringed seals in the Chukchi Sea have also been observed basking in high
densities on the last remnants of the seasonal sea ice during late June
to early July, near the end of the molting period (Shawn Dahle, NMFS,
personal communication, 2013). Crawford et al. (2012) reported that the
average ice concentrations ( standard error [SE]; standard
error is a measure of variability in the data) used by ringed seals in
the Chukchi and Bering seas during the basking period in June was 20
percent (SE = 7.8 percent) for subadults and 38 percent (SE = 21.4
percent) for adults. Based on the best available information, we
conclude that sea ice essential for basking and molting is sea ice of
at least 15 percent concentration.
3. Primary prey resources to support Arctic ringed seals, which are
defined to be Arctic cod, saffron cod, shrimps, and amphipods.
Primary prey resources are essential to conserving the Arctic
ringed seal, because Arctic ringed seals likely rely on these prey
resources the most to meet their annual energy budgets. Arctic ringed
seals feed on a wide variety of vertebrate and invertebrate prey
species, but certain prey species appear to occupy a prominent role in
their diets in waters along the Alaskan coast. Quakenbush et al. (2011,
Table 3) reported that prey items found in at least 25 percent of
ringed seal stomachs collected within the 1961 to 1984 and 1998 to 2009
time periods in the Bering and Chukchi seas included Arctic cod,
saffron cod (Eleginus gracilis), shrimps (from the families
Hippolytidae, Pandalidae, and Crangonidae), and amphipods (primarily
from the families Gammaridae and Hyperiidae). In the Barrow vicinity,
Dehn et al. (2007, Table 2) reported that prey items found in at least
25 percent of the stomachs of ringed seals collected between 1996 and
2001 included euphausiids (Thysanoessa spp.), cods (primarily Arctic
and saffron cod), mysids (Mysis and Neomysis spp.), amphipods, and
Pandalid shrimps. Finally, Lowry et al. (1980) found that prey items
that were consumed in the greatest quantities (i.e., >=25 percent of
the total food volume in any of the five seasonal samples) by ringed
seals in the Bering and Chukchi seas included Arctic cod, saffron cod,
shrimp, and amphipods (Chukchi Sea only), and in the central Beaufort
Sea included Arctic cod as well as Gammarid and Hyperiid amphipods.
Arctic cod, saffron cod, shrimps, and amphipods were identified as
prominent prey species for the studies conducted in both the Bering Sea
and the Chukchi Sea. As noted above, Arctic cod and amphipods were also
identified as the most important prey species by volume for ringed
seals sampled in the Beaufort Sea. Therefore, based on these studies,
we conclude that Arctic cod, saffron cod, shrimps, and amphipods are
the primary prey resources of Arctic ringed seals in U.S. waters. As
discussed above, Arctic ringed seals feed on a variety of prey items
and regional and seasonal differences in diet have been reported;
therefore, we conclude that areas in which the primary prey essential
feature occurs will contain one or more of these particular prey
resources.
[[Page 71719]]
Specific Areas Containing Physical or Biological Features Essential to
the Species
After determining the geographical area occupied by the Arctic
ringed seal at the time of listing, and identifying the physical and
biological features essential to its conservation, we then considered
which specific area(s) may be eligible for designation as critical
habitat. For a specific area to be eligible for designation, it must
contain at least one physical or biological feature essential to the
conservation of the species that may require special management
considerations or protection. When several habitats, each satisfying
the requirements for designation as critical habitat, are located in
proximity to one another, a single inclusive area may be designated as
critical habitat (50 CFR 424.12(d)).
In identifying these specific areas, we first focused on those
physical or biological features that support the critical Arctic ringed
seal life history functions of whelping and nursing, when birth lairs
are constructed and maintained, and molting (i.e., specific areas that
contain the sea ice essential features). As discussed above, Arctic
ringed seals are highly associated with sea ice, and are thought to
migrate seasonally to maintain access to the ice. Arctic ringed seal
whelping, nursing, and molting occur in the Bering, Chukchi, and
Beaufort seas. To delineate specific areas that contain one or both of
the sea ice essential features we considered where the sea ice
essential features occur in all three seas.
The dynamic nature of sea ice and the spatial and temporal
variations in sea ice cover and on-ice snow cover constrain our ability
to map with precision the specific geographic locations where the ice-
associated essential features occur. The specific geographic locations
of where essential sea ice habitat occurs vary from year to year, or
even day to day, depending on many factors, including time of year,
local weather, and oceanographic conditions. In addition, the duration
that any given location has sea ice habitat essential for birth lairs
or for molting can vary annually depending on the rate of ice melt and
other factors. Temporal overlap of Arctic ringed seal molting with
whelping and nursing, combined with the dynamic nature of sea ice, also
makes it impracticable to separately identify specific areas where each
of these essential sea ice features occur. Since the ESA requires the
designation of critical habitat where one or more such features occur,
the inability to separately identify areas where each essential ice
feature occurs is inconsequential. Arctic ringed seals can range
widely, which, combined with the dynamic variations in sea ice and snow
cover, results in individuals distributing broadly and utilizing
different sea ice habitat within a range of suitable conditions. We
integrated these physical and biological factors into our
identification of specific areas based on the seasonal distribution and
movements of Arctic ringed seals and satellite-derived estimates of the
position of the ice edge over time. Although this approach allowed us
to identify specific areas that contain one or both of the essential
sea ice features, the available data supported delineation of specific
areas only at a coarse scale. Consequently, we delineated a single
specific area that contains the sea ice features essential to the
conservation of Arctic ringed seals, as described below.
We first identified the southern boundary of the specific area
essential to conservation of the Arctic ringed seal. The information
discussed above regarding the distribution of Arctic ringed seals in
the Bering Sea (see Seasonal Distribution and Habitat Use) suggests
that sea ice essential for Arctic ringed seal birth lairs (and
potentially for molting) extends to some point south of St. Matthew
Island and Nunivak Island. A precise southern boundary for this habitat
is unavailable because existing information is limited on the spatial
distribution of Arctic ringed seals in the Bering Sea during spring and
where they may whelp. In addition, although minimum on-ice snowdrift
depths are essential for ringed seal birth lairs, we are not aware of
any available data on this particular component of sea ice cover in the
Bering Sea that could assist in identifying the southern boundary of
essential Arctic ringed seal birth lair habitat. We therefore turned to
Sea Ice Index data maintained by the National Snow and Ice Data Center
(NSIDC) for information on the estimated median position of the sea ice
edge in the Bering Sea during April (Fetterer et al., 2002, updated
2009; accessed December 2012), which is the peak month for Arctic
ringed seal whelping activity (peak molting for adults occurs later in
the spring). This estimated median ice edge is derived from a time
series of satellite records for the 1979 to 2000 reference period. We
note that the NSIDC has lengthened this reference period to include
more recent data through 2010. However, several of those more recent
years had above-average ice extent in the Bering Sea; and use of these
data would have resulted in the inclusion of areas that are unlikely to
contain the essential sea ice features on a consistent basis in more
than a few scattered portions of those areas.
The April median ice edge position is located approximately 135 km
(73 nmi) southwest of St. Matthew Island and 110 km (59 nmi) south of
Nunivak Island, which is relatively consistent with the information
discussed above regarding the spring distribution of Arctic ringed
seals in the Bering Sea. We therefore conclude that this estimate of
the position of the April median ice edge provides a reasonable
estimate of the southern extent of where the sea ice essential features
occur. To simplify this southern boundary for purposes of delineation
on maps, we modified this median ice edge contour as follows: (1) Line
vertices between the intersection point of the median ice extent at the
outer extent of the U.S. EEZ at 60[deg]31' N. lat., 179[deg]13' W.
long., and the point at 58[deg]22' N. lat., 170[deg]27' W. long., were
removed to form the segment of the southern boundary that extends from
the outer extent of the U.S. EEZ southeast approximately 553 km; (2)
line vertices between 58[deg]22' N. lat., 170[deg]27' W. long., and
59[deg] N. lat., 164[deg] W. long., were removed to form a second
segment of the southern boundary that extends east approximately 370
km; and (3) finally, these two contour line segments were connected to
the mainland coast southeast of Cape Avinof by 164[deg] W. long. This
editing produced a simplified southern boundary that retains the
general shape of the original contour line, while including 99 percent
of the area encompassed by the more detailed original line.
We note that some Arctic ringed seals may whelp south/southeast of
the southern boundary described above, as evidenced by harvest records
of ringed seal pups (Coffing et al., 1998). However, variability in the
annual extent and timing of sea ice in this southernmost portion of the
Arctic ringed seal's range in U.S. waters renders the area south of the
boundary described above unlikely to contain the essential sea ice
features on a consistent basis in more than a few scattered areas.
We then identified the northern boundary of the specific area
essential to conservation of the Arctic ringed seal. As discussed
above, the available data suggest that although Arctic ringed seals
appear to favor landfast ice, they are widely distributed offshore in
the northern Chukchi Sea and Beaufort seas and Arctic Ocean. Molting
ringed seals use suitable sea ice as a haul-out platform, and many
seals are thought to migrate north with the receding ice. As discussed
above, the specific geographic
[[Page 71720]]
locations where the sea ice essential features occur vary within and
between years. Given the inherent variability in the spatial
distribution of sea ice and the widespread distribution of Arctic
ringed seals, including in offshore pack ice, we defined the northern
and eastern boundaries of the one specific area identified as the outer
extent of the U.S. EEZ. We note that Canada contests the limits of the
U.S. EEZ in the eastern Beaufort Sea, asserting that the line
delimiting the two countries' EEZs should follow the 141st meridian out
to a distance of 200 nmi (as opposed to an equidistant line that
extends seaward perpendicular to the coast at the U.S.-Canada land
border). Because Arctic ringed seals are broadly distributed in
suitable habitat, we identified the shoreward extent of this specific
area as the coast line of Alaska as defined above (see Geographical
Area Occupied by the Species).
The primary prey resources essential feature also occurs within the
specific area identified above (e.g., North Pacific Fishery Management
Council, 2009; NMFS, 2013), as evidenced by the presence of the primary
prey species in the stomach contents of Arctic ringed seals sampled in
the Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort seas off Alaska (see Physical or
Biological Features Essential to Conservation of the Species). This is
of particular note with respect to the northern boundary of this
specific area. Following molting, some Arctic ringed seals may remain
in nearshore waters along the coast to feed, while others travel
extensively and feed farther offshore (Frost, 1985; Gjertz et al.,
2000; Freitas et al., 2008; Kelly et al., 2010b). Harwood et al. (2012)
reported that in late summer, several tagged ringed seals that migrated
from the Canadian Beaufort Sea to the Beaufort and Chukchi seas off
Alaska tended to remain over the continental shelf, almost always
remaining within 100 km of shore. However, recent telemetry data
documenting Arctic ringed seal movements during the open-water season
showed several seals made multiple trips between continental shelf
waters and the southern pack ice edge (Herreman et al., 2012), which
was well into the Arctic Basin and beyond the outer extent of the U.S.
EEZ in some cases. Dive recorders indicated that foraging-type
movements occurred over both the continental shelf and deep waters of
the Arctic Basin, suggesting that both areas may be important during
the open-water foraging period. Thus, the northern boundary of the
specific area identified above accounts not only for habitat containing
one or both of the sea ice features essential to conservation, but very
likely also includes the distributions of the primary prey resources
used by foraging Arctic ringed seals in U.S. waters.
Special Management Considerations or Protection
An occupied area may be designated as critical habitat only if it
contains physical or biological features that ``may require special
management considerations or protection'' (50 CFR 424.12(b)). It is
important to note that the phrase ``may require special management
considerations or protection'' refers to the physical or biological
features, rather than the area proposed as critical habitat. We
interpret this to mean that a feature may presently or in the future
require special management considerations or protection. Joint NMFS and
USFWS regulations at 50 CFR 424.02(j) define ``special management
considerations or protection'' to mean ``any methods or procedures
useful in protecting physical and biological features of the
environment for the conservation of listed species.''
The status review report (Kelly et al., 2010a) and the proposed and
final rules listing the subspecies as threatened (75 FR 77476, December
10, 2010; 77 FR 76706, December 28, 2012) comprehensively review the
threats affecting the Arctic ringed seal. Based upon that review, we
identified several categories of human activities and associated
threats that may affect each of the features identified as essential to
conservation of Arctic ringed seals. These activities include:
Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions; oil and gas exploration, development,
and production; shipping and transportation; and commercial fishing.
Below, we evaluate whether each essential feature may require special
management considerations or protection due to the potential effects of
these activities on the essential features. We note that our evaluation
does not consider an exhaustive list of potential effects on the
essential features, but rather considers the primary potential effects
that we are aware of at this time.
GHG Emissions: The principal threat to the persistence of the
Arctic ringed seal is the ongoing and anticipated loss of sea ice and
on-ice snow cover stemming from climate change. Climate change related
threats to the Arctic ringed seal's habitat are discussed in detail in
the ringed seal status review report (Kelly et al., 2010a), as well as
in the proposed and final rules listing the Arctic ringed seal as
threatened. Activities that release carbon dioxide and other heat-
trapping GHGs into the atmosphere, most notably those that involve
fossil fuel combustion, are a major contributing factor to climate
change and loss of sea ice (IPCC, 2013). Such activities may adversely
affect the essential features of Arctic ringed seal habitat by
diminishing sea ice suitable for birth lairs and molting, and by
causing changes in the distribution and/or species composition of prey
resources. The best scientific data currently available do not allow us
to identify a causal linkage between any particular single source of
GHG emissions and identifiable effects on the physical and biological
features essential to Arctic ringed seals. Regardless, given that the
quality and quantity of these essential habitat features, in particular
sea ice, may be diminished by the effects of climate change, we
conclude that special management considerations or protection may be
necessary, either now or in the future, even if the exact focus and
nature of that management is presently undeterminable.
Oil and Gas Activity: Extensive oil and gas reserves, coupled with
rising global demand, make it very likely that oil and gas activity
will increase throughout the Arctic in the future. Oil and gas
exploration, development, and production activities in the U.S. Arctic
may include: Seismic surveys; exploratory, delineation, and production
drilling operations; construction of artificial islands, causeways, ice
roads, shore-based facilities, and pipelines; and vessel and aircraft
operations. These activities have the potential to affect Arctic ringed
seals and their habitat, primarily through noise, physical disturbance,
and pollution, particularly in the event of an oil spill, and
especially a large oil spill.
The Arctic ringed seal's range overlaps with, and is adjacent to, a
number of active and planned oil and gas operations. To date, most oil
and gas activities conducted off the Alaska coast have occurred in the
Beaufort Sea, primarily near Prudhoe Bay. No oil fields have been
developed or brought into production in the Chukchi Sea; however, the
one recent lease sale in the Chukchi Sea (Lease Sale 193) and
exploration drilling programs moving forward in this region signal
growing interest in oil and gas development there.
Large oil spills are generally considered to be the greatest threat
of oil and gas activities in the Arctic marine environment (Arctic
Monitoring and Assessment Program (AMAP), 2007). In contrast to spills
on land, large spills at sea are difficult to contain and may
[[Page 71721]]
spread over hundreds or thousands of kilometers. Responding to a
sizeable spill in the Arctic environment would be particularly
challenging. Reaching a spill site and responding effectively would be
especially difficult, if not impossible, in winter when weather can be
severe and daylight extremely limited. Oil spills under ice or in ice-
covered waters are the most challenging to deal with, due to, among
other factors, limitations on the effectiveness of current containment
and recovery technologies when sea ice is present. The difficulties
experienced in stopping and containing the 2010 oil blowout at the
Deepwater Horizon well in the Gulf of Mexico, where environmental
conditions, available infrastructure, and response preparedness are
comparatively good, point toward even greater challenges in attempting
a similar feat in a much more environmentally severe and geographically
remote location.
Although planning, management, and use of best practices can help
reduce risks and impacts, the history of oil and gas activities
indicates that accidents cannot be eliminated (AMAP, 2007). Data on
large spills (e.g., operational discharges, spills from pipelines,
blowouts) in Arctic waters are limited because oil exploration and
production there has been limited. The Bureau of Ocean Energy
Management (BOEM, 2011) estimated the chance of one or more oil spills
greater than or equal to 1,000 barrels occurring if development were to
take place in the Beaufort Sea or Chukchi Sea Planning Areas as 26
percent for the Beaufort Sea over the estimated 20 years of production
and development, and 40 percent for the Chukchi Sea over the estimated
25 years of production and development.
The introduction of sounds and physical disturbance associated with
oil and gas exploration and development could also affect Arctic ringed
seals and their habitat. Such activities may include physical presence
of vessels, icebreaking activity, aircraft activity, seismic surveys,
site clearance and shallow hazards surveys, and drilling and production
activities. Icebreaking vessels, which may be used for in-ice seismic
surveys or to manage ice near exploratory drilling ships, have the
potential to affect Arctic ringed seals and their habitat through both
acoustic effects and physical alteration of the sea ice (Richardson et
al., 1995). Seismic surveys are a particularly intense source of noise,
and thus warrant specific consideration. Arctic ringed seals, like
other phocids or ``true'' seals, have good low-frequency hearing, and
so it is expected that they will be susceptible to masking of
biologically significant signals by low frequency sounds, such as those
from seismic surveys (Gordon et al., 2003). Reported seal responses to
seismic surveys have been variable and often contradictory, although
they suggest that pinnipeds frequently do not avoid the area within a
few hundred meters of operating airgun arrays (Brueggeman et al., 1991;
Harris et al.; 2001, Miller and Davis, 2002). Construction, drilling,
and development activities on a manmade artificial island were reported
to have had at most minor, short-term, and localized effects on ringed
seals (Blackwell et al., 2004; Richardson and Williams, 2004; Moulton
et al., 2005); and during a single season of a near shore exploratory
drilling operation, Harwood et al. (2007) found no detectable effects
on ringed seals.
In summary, a major oil spill could render areas containing the
identified essential features unsuitable for use by Arctic ringed
seals. In such an event, sea ice habitat suitable for whelping,
nursing, or molting could be oiled. The primary Arctic ringed seal prey
species could also become contaminated, experience mortality, or be
otherwise adversely affected by spilled oil. In addition, disturbance
effects (both physical disturbance and acoustic effects) could alter
the quality of the essential features of Artic ringed seal critical
habitat, or render habitat unsuitable. We conclude that the essential
features of the habitat of the Arctic ringed seal may require special
management considerations or protection in the future to minimize the
risks posed to these features by oil and gas exploration, development,
and production.
Shipping and Transportation: The reduction in Arctic sea ice that
has occurred in recent years has renewed interest in using the Arctic
Ocean as a potential waterway for coastal, regional, and trans-Arctic
marine operations (Brigham and Ellis, 2004). Climate models predict
that the warming trend in the Arctic will accelerate, causing the ice
to begin melting earlier in the spring and resume freezing later in the
fall, resulting in an expansion of potential shipping routes and a
lengthening of the potential navigation season (Arctic Climate Impact
Assessment (ACIA), 2004; Khon et al., 2010). At present, the two main
navigation routes crossing the Arctic are the Northwest Passage (NWP)
and the Northern Sea Route (NSR). Based on an analysis of sea ice model
projections, Smith and Stephenson (2013) concluded that, by mid-
century, changing sea ice conditions will enable expanded September
navigability for common open-water ships along these two navigation
routes. By 2100, the navigation season for the NSR is projected to
increase from the current period of 20 to 30 days per year to 90 to 100
days per year (ACIA, 2004).
The fact that nearly all shipping activity in the Arctic (with the
exception of icebreaking) purposefully avoids areas of ice, and
primarily occurs during the ice-free or low-ice seasons, helps to
mitigate the risks of shipping to Arctic ringed seal habitat. However,
as noted above, icebreakers pose greater risks to ringed seals and
their habitat since they are capable of operating year-round in all but
the heaviest ice conditions and are often used to escort other types of
vessels (e.g., tankers and bulk carriers) through ice-covered areas.
Furthermore, new classes of ships are being designed that serve the
dual roles of both tanker/carrier and icebreaker (Arctic Council,
2009). Therefore, if icebreaking activities increase in the Arctic in
the future, as expected, the likelihood of negative impacts (e.g., oil
spills, pollution, noise, disturbance, and habitat alteration)
occurring in ice-covered areas where Arctic ringed seals reside will
likely also increase.
Increases in international shipping are producing ever-greater
levels of underwater noise capable of long-range transmission
(Southall, 2005; G[ouml]tz et al., 2009). All vessels produce sound
during operation, which when propagated at certain frequencies and
intensities can alter the normal behavior of marine mammals, mask their
underwater communications and other uses of sound, cause them to avoid
noisy areas, and, in extreme cases, damage their auditory systems and
cause death (Marine Mammal Commission, 2007; Arctic Council, 2009;
G[ouml]tz et al., 2009).
In addition to the potential introduction of sound from increased
vessel traffic and the physical presence and movements of these
vessels, the maritime shipping industry transports various types of
petroleum products, both as fuel and cargo, within the proposed
critical habitat. If increased shipping involves the tanker transport
of crude oil or oil products, there would be an increased risk of
spills (ACIA, 2005; U.S. Arctic Research Commission, 2012). Similar to
oil and gas activities, the most significant threat posed by shipping
activities is considered the accidental or illegal discharge of oil or
other toxic substance carried by ships (Arctic Council, 2009).
We conclude that the essential features of the habitat of the
Arctic ringed seal may require special management considerations or
protection in the future to minimize the
[[Page 71722]]
risks posed to these features by potential shipping and transportation
activities, because: (1) Both the physical disturbance and noise
associated with these activities could displace seals from favored
habitat that contains the essential features, thus altering the
quantity and/or quality of these features; and (2) in the event of an
oil spill, sea ice essential for birth lairs and for molting could
become oiled, and the quantity and/or quality of the primary prey
resources could be adversely affected.
Commercial Fisheries: The proposed critical habitat area overlaps
with waters of the Federal Arctic Management Area and the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area. No commercial fishing is
permitted within the Arctic Management Area due to insufficient data to
support the sustainable management of a commercial fishery there.
However, as additional information becomes available, commercial
fishing may be allowed in this management area. Two of the primary
Arctic ringed seal prey species identified as essential to
conservation--Arctic cod and saffron cod--have been identified as
likely initial target species for commercial fishing in Federal Arctic
waters in the future (North Pacific Fishery Management Council, 2009).
In the northern portion of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area, limited commercial fisheries overlap with the
southernmost portion of the proposed critical habitat. Portions of the
proposed critical habitat also overlap with certain state commercial
fisheries management areas. Commercial catches from waters in the
proposed critical habitat area primarily include: Pacific halibut
(Hippoglossus stenolepis), several other flatfish species, Pacific cod
(Gadus macrocephalus), several crab species, walleye pollock (Theragra
chalcogramma), and several salmon species.
Commercial fisheries may affect the primary prey resources
identified as essential to the conservation of the Arctic ringed seal,
through removal of prey biomass and potentially through modification of
benthic habitat by bottom-trawl gear. Given the potential changes in
commercial fishing that may occur with the expected increasing length
of the open-water season and range expansion of some economically
valuable species responding to climate change, we conclude that the
primary prey resources essential feature may require special management
considerations or protection in the future to address potential adverse
effects of commercial fishing on this feature.
Unoccupied Areas
Section 3(5)(A)(ii) of the ESA further defines critical habitat to
include specific areas outside the geographical area occupied by the
species if the Secretary determines them to be essential for the
conservation of the species. Our regulations at 50 CFR 424.12(e)
emphasize that the Secretary ``shall designate as critical habitat
areas outside the geographical area presently occupied by a species
only when a designation limited to its present range would be
inadequate to ensure the conservation of the species.'' We have not
identified any specific areas outside the geographical area occupied by
the Arctic ringed seal that are essential for its conservation;
consequently, we are not proposing to designate any specific areas
outside its current range.
Application of ESA Section 4(a)(3)(B)(i)
ESA section 4(a)(3)(B)(i) states: ``The Secretary shall not
designate as critical habitat any lands or other geographical areas
owned or controlled by the Department of Defense, or designated for its
use, that are subject to an integrated natural resources management
plan prepared under section 670a of this title [section 101 of the
Sikes Act], if the Secretary determines in writing that such plan
provides a benefit to the species for which critical habitat is
proposed for designation.'' We contacted the Department of Defense
(DOD) and requested information on any facilities or managed areas that
are subject to an Integrated Natural Resources Management Plan (INRMP)
and are located within areas that could potentially be proposed as
critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal. In response, DOD provided
a map of facilities subject to an INRMP. No DOD lands overlap with the
area proposed as critical habitat. Therefore, we conclude that there
are no properties owned, controlled, or designated for use by DOD that
are subject to ESA section 4(a)(3)(B)(i) for this proposed critical
habitat.
Application of ESA Section 4(b)(2)
Before including areas in a critical habitat designation, section
4(b)(2) of the ESA and our implementing regulations require the
Secretary to take into consideration the economic, national security,
and other relevant impacts of the designation. Impacts may be
quantitatively or qualitatively described, and considered at a scale
that the Secretary determines to be appropriate (50 CFR 424.19(b)).
Additionally, the Secretary has discretion to exclude any particular
area from the critical habitat upon a determination that the benefits
of such exclusion outweigh the benefits of designation. The Secretary,
however, cannot exclude any particular area if, based on the best
scientific and commercial data available, the Secretary determines that
the failure to designate that area as critical habitat will result in
the extinction of the species concerned. Because the authority to
exclude any area from the critical habitat designation is
discretionary, exclusion is not required for any particular area. For
the reasons set forth below, we do not propose to exercise our
discretion to exclude any areas from the proposed critical habitat
designation.
The primary impacts of a critical habitat designation arise from
the ESA section 7(a)(2) requirement that Federal agencies ensure their
actions are not likely to result in the destruction or adverse
modification of critical habitat (i.e., adverse modification standard).
Determining these impacts is complicated by the fact that section
7(a)(2) contains the overlapping requirement that Federal agencies
ensure their actions are not likely to jeopardize the species'
continued existence (i.e., the jeopardy standard). One incremental
impact of critical habitat designation is the extent to which Federal
agencies modify their proposed actions to ensure they are not likely to
adversely modify the critical habitat, beyond any modifications they
would make because of listing and the jeopardy standard. Additional
impacts of critical habitat designation include any state and/or local
protection that may be triggered as a direct result of designation (we
did not identify any such impacts), and benefits that may arise from
education of the public to the importance of an area for species
conservation.
A draft economic report, prepared by an environmental consulting
firm (in cooperation with NMFS) with expertise in natural resource
economics, describes the impact analyses for this proposed rule in
detail (Cardno Entrix, 2014). In determining the impacts of
designation, we focused on the incremental change in Federal agency
actions as a result of critical habitat designation and the adverse
modification standard (see Arizona Cattle Growers v. Salazar, 606 F. 3d
1160 (9th Cir. 2010)) (holding that the FWS permissibly attributed the
economic impacts of protecting the northern spotted owl as part of the
baseline and was not required to factor those impacts into the economic
[[Page 71723]]
analysis of the effects of the critical habitat designation). We
analyzed the impacts of this proposed designation based on a comparison
of conditions with and without the designation of critical habitat for
the Arctic ringed seal. The ``without critical habitat'' scenario
represents the baseline for the analysis. It includes process
requirements and habitat protections already extended to the Arctic
ringed seal under its ESA listing and under other Federal, state, and
local regulations. The ``with critical habitat'' scenario describes the
incremental impacts associated specifically with the designation of
critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal. This analysis assesses the
incremental costs and benefits that may arise due to the proposed
critical habitat designation, with economic costs estimated within a
10-year post-designation timeframe. The 10-year timeframe was chosen
because it is lengthy enough to reflect the planning horizon for
reasonably predicting future human activities, yet it is short enough
to allow reasonable projections of changes in use patterns in an area,
as well as of exogenous factors (e.g., world supply and demand for
petroleum, U.S. inflation rate trends) that may be influential. We
recognize that economic costs of the designation are likely to extend
beyond the 10-year timeframe of the analysis, though we have no
information indicating that such costs in subsequent years would be
different from those projected for the first 10-year period. Although
not quantified or analyzed in detail due to the high level of
uncertainty regarding longer-term effects, the draft economic report
includes a discussion of the potential types of costs and benefits that
may accrue beyond the 10-year time window of the analysis.
Benefits of Designation
As noted above, the protection afforded under the ESA section 7
requirement for Federal agencies to ensure their actions are not likely
to destroy or adversely modify designated critical habitat is in
addition to ESA requirements to protect listed species. Specifically,
ESA section 7(a)(1) requires all Federal agencies to use their
authorities in furtherance of the purposes of the ESA by carrying out
programs for the conservation of endangered and threatened species, and
section 7(a)(2) requires Federal agencies to ensure their actions are
not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of listed species.
Another benefit of critical habitat designation is that it provides
specific notice of the features essential to the conservation of the
Arctic ringed seal and where they occur. This information will focus
future consultations on the key habitat attributes and avoid
unnecessary attention on other, non-essential habitat features. By
identifying the specific areas where the features essential to
conservation of the Arctic ringed seal occur, there may also be
enhanced awareness by Federal agencies and the general public of
activities that might affect those essential features. Moreover,
identification of features essential to the conservation of the species
may improve discussions with action agencies regarding relevant habitat
considerations of proposed projects.
In addition, the critical habitat designation may result in
indirect benefits, as discussed in detail in the draft economic report
(Cardno Entrix, 2014), including education benefits and enhanced public
awareness, which may help focus and contribute to conservation efforts
for the Arctic ringed seal and its habitat. For example, by identifying
features essential to conservation of the Arctic ringed seal and where
those features are found, complementary protections may be developed
under state or local regulations or voluntary conservation plans. These
other forms of benefits may be economic in nature (whether market or
non-market, consumptive, non-consumptive, or passive), educational,
cultural, or sociological, or they may be expressed through beneficial
changes in the ecological functioning of the species' habitat, which
itself yields ancillary welfare benefits (e.g., improved quality of
life) to the region's human population. For example, because the
critical habitat designation is expected to result in enhanced
conservation of the Arctic ringed seal over time, residents of the
region who value these seals, such as subsistence users, are expected
to experience indirect benefits. As another example, the geographic
area of the proposed critical habitat overlaps substantially with the
range of the polar bear in the United States, and the Arctic ringed
seal is the primary prey species of the polar bear, so the designation
may also provide indirect conservation benefits to the polar bear.
Indirect conservation benefits may also extend to other co-occurring
species, such as the Pacific walrus and other seal species.
It is not presently feasible to monetize, or even quantify, each
component part of the benefits accruing from the designation of
critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal. Therefore, we augmented
the quantitative measurements that are summarized here and discussed in
detail in the economic report with qualitative and descriptive
assessments, as provided for under 50 CFR 424.19(b) and in guidance
from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) (OMB Circular A-4,
September 17, 2003). Although we cannot monetize or quantify all of the
incremental benefits of the proposed critical habitat designation, we
believe that they are not inconsequential.
Economic Impacts of Designation
Direct economic costs of the critical habitat designation accrue
primarily through implementation of section 7 of the ESA in
consultations with Federal agencies to ensure their proposed actions
are not likely to destroy or adversely modify critical habitat. Those
economic impacts may include both administrative costs and project
modifications. At this time, on the basis of how protections are
currently being implemented for Arctic ringed seals under the MMPA and
as a threatened species under the ESA, we do not anticipate that
additional requests for project modifications will result specifically
from a designation of critical habitat. As a result, the direct
incremental costs of the proposed critical habitat designation are
expected to be limited to the additional administrative costs of
considering Arctic ringed seal critical habitat in future ESA section 7
consultations.
Because the Arctic ringed seal is newly listed and we lack a
lengthy consultation history for this species, we needed to make
assumptions about the types of future Federal activities that might
require section 7 consultations under the ESA. To identify the types of
Federal activities that may affect critical habitat for the Arctic
ringed seal, and therefore would be subject to the ESA section 7
adverse modification standard, we examined recent incidental take
authorizations issued by NMFS under the MMPA and the limited number of
ESA section 7 consultations that have addressed Arctic ringed seals. To
derive estimates of the maximum number of future oil and gas related
consultations, we extrapolated from the maximum exploration activity
level described in the supplemental draft environmental impact
statement on the effects of oil and gas activities in the Arctic Ocean
(NMFS, 2013). We request Federal agencies to provide us with
information on future consultations, if our assumptions omitted any
future actions likely to affect the proposed critical habitat.
We identified several categories of activities with a Federal nexus
that may affect critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal within the
time frame of the
[[Page 71724]]
analysis (10 years post-designation) and, therefore, would be subject
to the ESA section 7 adverse modification standard. These include oil
and gas related activities, dredge mining, navigation dredging,
commercial fishing, oil spill prevention and response, and certain
military activities. All of the projected future Federal actions that
may trigger consultation due to the potential to affect critical
habitat also have the potential to affect individual ringed seals. In
other words, none of the activities we identified would trigger
consultation solely on the basis of the proposed critical habitat
designation. Federal action agencies with jurisdiction over projected
future actions that may affect the proposed critical habitat area
include the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, BOEM, Bureau of Land
Management, DOD, Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Coast Guard, and
NMFS. We would expect the majority of projected consultations due to
potential effects on critical habitat to involve NMFS and BOEM
authorizations and permitting of oil and gas related activities.
As detailed in the draft economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014), the
total incremental costs associated with this proposed critical habitat
designation within the 10-year post-designation timeframe, in
discounted present value terms, were estimated at $1.33 million
(discounted at 7 percent) to $1.86 million (discounted at 3 percent).
Ninety-five percent of the incremental costs attributed to the critical
habitat designation are expected to accrue from consultations
associated with oil and gas related activities in the Chukchi and
Beaufort seas. We note that absent historical experience on
consultation frequency involving the proposed critical habitat, in
deriving these cost estimates, we assumed that a maximum projected
level of oil and gas activity will occur annually (10 formal
consultations each and every year; and several other formal and
informal consultations over the 10-year post-designation timeframe).
However, it is unlikely that this peak level of activity would occur
every year. Indeed, in 2011, 2012, and 2013, there were one, five, and
three formal consultations, respectively, completed relating to oil and
gas activities in the Beaufort and Chukchi seas. While not quantifiable
at this time, the draft economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014) discusses
that the oil and gas industry may also incur indirect costs associated
with the critical habitat designation if future third-party litigation
over specific consultations is successful and creates delays or other
sources of regulatory uncertainty.
In summary, we have preliminarily concluded, subject to further
consideration based on public comment, that the potential economic
impacts of the proposed critical habitat designation would be modest
both in absolute terms and relative to the level of economic activity
expected to occur in the affected area in the foreseeable future. As a
result, and in light of the benefits of critical habitat designation
discussed above and in the draft economic report, we are not proposing
to exclude any areas pursuant to section 4(b)(2) of the ESA based on
economic impacts.
National Security Impacts of Designation
Section 4(b)(2) of the ESA also requires consideration of national
security impacts. We contacted the DOD regarding any potential impacts
of the proposed critical habitat designation to military operations. In
a letter dated June 3, 2013, the DOD Regional Environmental Coordinator
indicated that no impacts on national security are currently foreseen
from the proposed critical habitat designation. As a result, we have
not identified any direct impacts from the critical habitat designation
on activities associated with national security. We have preliminarily
concluded, subject to further consideration based on public comment or
additional information from DOD, that we will not exercise our
discretionary authority to exclude any areas based on national security
impacts.
Other Relevant Impacts of Designation
Finally, under ESA section 4(b)(2) we consider any other relevant
impacts of critical habitat designation to inform our decision as to
whether to exclude any areas. For example, we may consider potential
adverse effects on existing management plans or conservations plans
that benefit listed species, and we may consider potential adverse
effects on tribal lands or trust resources. In preparing this proposed
designation, we have not identified any such management or conservation
plans, tribal lands or resources, or anything else that would be
adversely affected by the proposed critical habitat designation.
Accordingly, we have preliminarily concluded, subject to further
consideration based on public comment, that we will not exercise our
discretionary authority to exclude any areas based on other relevant
impacts.
Critical Habitat Designation
We propose to designate as critical habitat one specific area of
marine habitat in Alaska and offshore Federal waters of the northern
Bering, Chukchi, and Beaufort seas within the geographical area
presently occupied by the Arctic ringed seal. This critical habitat
area contains physical or biological features essential to the
conservation of Arctic ringed seals that may require special management
considerations or protection. We have not identified any unoccupied
areas that are essential to conservation of the Arctic ringed seal and
we are not proposing any such areas for designation as critical
habitat. We are not proposing to exclude any areas based on economic
impacts, impacts to national security, or other relevant impacts of the
proposed designation. In accordance with our regulations regarding
critical habitat designation (50 CFR 424.12(c)), the map we are
including in the proposed regulation, as clarified by the accompanying
regulatory text, would constitute the official boundary of the proposed
designation.
Effects of Critical Habitat Designation
Section 7(a)(2) of the ESA requires Federal agencies, including
NMFS, to ensure that any action authorized, funded, or carried out by
the agency does not jeopardize the continued existence of any
threatened or endangered species or destroy or adversely modify
designated critical habitat. Federal agencies must consult with us on
any action that may affect listed species or critical habitat. During
the consultation, we evaluate the agency action to determine whether
the action may adversely affect listed species or critical habitat. If
we conclude that the agency action would likely result in the
destruction or adverse modification of critical habitat, we would
suggest reasonable and prudent alternatives to the action that avoid
that result.
Regulations at 50 CFR 402.16 require Federal agencies that have
retained discretionary involvement or control over an action, or where
such discretionary involvement or control is authorized by law, to
reinitiate consultation on previously reviewed actions in instances
where: (1) Critical habitat is subsequently designated; or (2) new
information or changes to the action may result in effects to critical
habitat not previously considered (among other reasons for
reinitiation). Consequently, following designation of critical habitat
for Arctic ringed seals, some Federal agencies may request
[[Page 71725]]
reinitiation of consultation or conference with us on actions for which
consultation has been completed, if those actions may affect designated
critical habitat.
Section 4(c)(2) of the ESA directs the Secretary to review the
listing classification of threatened and endangered species, based on
the best available scientific information concerning the species'
status, at least once every 5 years. The ESA also provides that NMFS
may, from time-to-time, revise critical habitat as new data become
available to the Secretary (section 4(a)(3)(A)(ii)). Thus, new
information considered during a 5-year review may also help inform
future consideration of whether the best available information at that
time indicates revision of critical habitat may be appropriate.
Activities That May Be Affected by Critical Habitat Designation
Section 4(b)(8) of the ESA requires that we briefly describe and
evaluate, in any proposed or final regulation to designate critical
habitat, those activities that may destroy or adversely modify such
habitat, or that may be affected by such designation. A wide variety of
activities may affect the proposed critical habitat for Arctic ringed
seals and, if carried out, funded, or authorized by a Federal agency,
would require ESA section 7 consultation. Such activities or actions
include: In-water and coastal construction; activities that generate
water pollution; dredging; commercial fisheries; oil and gas
exploration, development, and production; oil spill prevention and
response; and certain DOD activities. An evaluation of the economic
effects of ESA section 7 consultations regarding the proposed critical
habitat is provided in the draft economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014)
and summarized above.
Public Comments Solicited
To ensure the final action resulting from this proposal will be as
accurate and effective as possible, we solicit comments and information
from the public, other concerned government agencies, Alaska Native
tribes and organizations, the scientific community, industry, and any
other interested parties concerning this proposed rule. We particularly
seek comments and information concerning: (1) Habitat use of Arctic
ringed seals; (2) the identification, location, and quality of physical
or biological features essential to the conservation of Arctic ringed
seal; (3) the potential impacts of designating the proposed critical
habitat, including the types of Federal activities that may trigger ESA
section 7 consultation; (4) current or planned activities in the area
proposed for designation and their possible impacts on the proposed
critical habitat; (5) the potential effects of the designation on
Alaska Native cultural practices and villages; (6) any foreseeable
economic, national security, Tribal, or other relevant impacts
resulting from the proposed designation; and (7) whether any particular
areas that we are proposing for critical habitat designation should be
considered for exclusion under section 4(b)(2) of the ESA and why. For
these described impacts or benefits, we request that the following
specific information (if relevant) be provided to inform our ESA
section 4(b)(2) analysis: (1) A map and description of the affected
area; (2) a description of the activities that may be affected within
the area; (3) a description of past, ongoing, or future conservation
measures conducted within the area that may protect Arctic ringed seal
habitat; and (4) a point of contact. You may submit your comments and
information concerning this proposed rule by any one of several methods
(see ADDRESSES). Copies of the proposed rule and supporting
documentation, including the draft economic report (Cardno Entrix,
2014), are available on the NMFS Alaska Region Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov, from the Federal eRulemaking Web site at
https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2013-0114, or
upon request (see ADDRESSES). We will consider all comments and
information received during the comment period for this proposed rule
in preparing the final rule. Accordingly, the final decision may differ
from this proposed rule.
Information Quality Act and Peer Review
On December 16, 2004, the OMB issued a Final Information Quality
Bulletin for Peer Review (Bulletin) establishing minimum peer review
standards, a transparent process for public disclosure of peer review
planning, and opportunities for public participation. The OMB Bulletin,
implemented under the Information Quality Act (Pub. L. 106-554), is
intended to enhance the quality and credibility of scientific
information disseminated by the Federal government, and applies to
influential and highly influential scientific information disseminated
on or after June 16, 2005. To satisfy our requirements under the OMB
Bulletin, we are obtaining independent peer review of this proposed
rule and the draft economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014), and will
address all comments received in developing the final rule and the
final version of the economic report.
Classification
Regulatory Planning and Review (E.O. 12866)
The economic costs and benefits of the proposed critical habitat
designation are described in our draft economic report (i.e., RIR/
4(b)(2) Preparatory Analysis/IRFA; Cardno Entrix, 2014). OMB has
determined that this rule is ``significant,'' but not ``economically
significant,'' under E.O. 12866(3)(f).
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
(SBREFA) of 1996), whenever an agency publishes a notice of rulemaking
for any proposed or final rule, it must prepare and make available for
public comment a regulatory flexibility analysis that describes the
effects of the rule on small entities (i.e., small businesses, small
not-for-profit organizations, and small government jurisdictions). We
have prepared an initial regulatory flexibility act analysis (IRFA),
which is included as part of the draft economic report (Cardno Entrix,
2014). The IRFA estimates the potential number of small businesses that
may be directly regulated by this proposed rule, and the impact
(incremental costs) per small entity for a given activity type.
Specifically, based on an examination of the North American Industry
Classification System (NAICS), this analysis classifies the economic
activities potentially directly regulated by the proposed action into
industry sectors and provides an estimate of their number in each
sector, based on the applicable NAICS codes. A summary of the IRFA
follows.
A description of the action (i.e., proposed designation of critical
habitat), why it is being considered, and its legal basis are included
in the preamble of this proposed rule. This proposed action does not
impose new recordkeeping or reporting requirements on small entities.
The analysis did not reveal any Federal rules that duplicate, overlap,
or conflict with the proposed action. Existing Federal laws and
regulations overlap with the proposed rule only to the extent that they
provide protection to natural resources within the area proposed as
critical habitat generally. However, no existing regulations
[[Page 71726]]
specifically prohibit destruction or adverse modification of critical
habitat for the Arctic ringed seal.
The regulatory mechanism through which critical habitat protections
are enforced is section 7 of the ESA, which directly regulates only
those activities carried out, funded, or permitted by a Federal agency.
By definition, Federal agencies are not considered small entities,
although the activities they fund or permit may be proposed or carried
out by small entities. In some cases small entities may participate as
third parties during ESA section 7 consultations (the primary parties
being the Federal action agency and NMFS) and thus they may be
indirectly affected by the proposed critical habitat designation.
As detailed in the draft economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014), the
oil and gas exploration, development, and production industries
participate in activities that are likely to require consideration of
critical habitat in ESA section 7 consultations. The Small Business
Administration size standards used to define small businesses in these
cases are: (1) An average of no more than 500 employees (crude
petroleum and natural gas extraction industry); or (2) average annual
receipts of no more than $35.5 million (support activities for oil and
has operations industry). No independent not-for-profit enterprises
were identified that are likely to be affected by the proposed critical
habitat designation. None of the parties identified in the oil and gas
category appear to qualify as small businesses. Two government
jurisdictions with ports appear to qualify as small government
jurisdictions (serving populations of less than 50,000). Within the 10-
year analytical timeframe, one of these two ports is expected to incur
up to $4,000 (discounted at 3 percent) in total incremental
consultation costs for authorization of navigation dredging activities,
while the other is not expected to incur any costs associated with ESA
section 7 consultations. This cost represents less than 0.1 percent of
average annual receipts for this port.
We encourage small businesses, small governmental jurisdictions,
and other small entities that may be affected indirectly by this rule
to provide comment on the estimated number of small entities likely to
participate as third parties during ESA section 7 consultations and the
potential economic impacts of the proposed critical habitat
designation, such as anticipated costs of consultation and potential
project modifications, to improve the RFA analysis.
As required by the RFA (as amended by the SBREFA), we considered
various alternatives to the proposed critical habitat designation for
the Arctic ringed seal. We considered and rejected the alternative of
not designating critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal, because
such an alternative does not meet the legal requirements of the ESA. We
considered an alternative under which we would exercise discretion
pursuant to section 4(b)(2) of the ESA to exclude certain areas, but we
are not proposing to do so: the 4(b)(2) analysis identifies that there
will be economic impacts from this designation, but we do not believe
the benefits of excluding any particular area outweigh the benefits of
inclusion. NMFS is seeking comments on the 4(b)(2) analysis, and all
comments and information received will be considered in developing our
final determination to designate critical habitat for the Arctic ringed
seal.
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use (E.O. 13211)
Executive Order 13211 requires agencies to prepare Statements of
Energy Effects when undertaking any action that promulgates or is
expected to lead to the promulgation of a final rule or regulations
that: (1) Is a significant regulatory action under E.O. 12866, and (2)
is likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy. We have considered the potential
impacts of this action on the supply, distribution, or use of energy
(see Cardno Entrix, 2014). The proposed critical habitat designation
overlaps with five BOEM planning areas for Outer Continental Shelf oil
and gas leasing; however, the Beaufort and Chukchi Sea planning areas
are the only areas with existing or planned leases.
Currently, the majority of oil and gas production occurs on land
adjacent to the Beaufort Sea and the proposed critical habitat area.
Any proposed offshore oil and gas projects likely would have to undergo
ESA section 7 consultations to ensure that the actions are not likely
to destroy or adversely modify designated critical habitat. However, as
discussed in the draft economic report (Cardno Entrix, 2014), such
consultations will not result in any new and significant effects on
energy supply, distribution, or use. ESA section 7 consultations have
occurred for numerous oil and gas projects within the area of the
proposed critical habitat (e.g., relative to possible effects on
endangered bowhead whales, a species without designated critical
habitat) without adversely affecting energy supply, distribution, or
use, and we would expect the same relative to critical habitat for
Arctic ringed seals. We have, therefore, determined that the energy
effects of this proposed rule are unlikely to exceed the impact
thresholds identified in E.O. 13211, and that this proposed rulemaking
is not a significant energy action.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
In accordance with the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501
et seq.), we make the following findings:
1. This proposed rule will not produce a Federal mandate. In
general, a Federal mandate is a provision in legislation or regulation
that would impose an enforceable duty upon state, local, tribal
governments, or the private sector and includes both ``Federal
intergovernmental mandates'' and ``Federal private sector mandates.''
These terms are defined in 2 U.S.C. 658(5)-(7). ``Federal
intergovernmental mandate'' includes a regulation that ``would impose
an enforceable duty upon State, local, or tribal governments'' with two
exceptions. It excludes ``a condition of Federal assistance.'' It also
excludes ``a duty arising from participation in a voluntary Federal
program,'' unless the regulation ``relates to a then-existing Federal
program under which $500,000,000 or more is provided annually to State,
local, and tribal governments under entitlement authority,'' if the
provision would ``increase the stringency of conditions of assistance''
or ``place caps upon, or otherwise decrease, the Federal Government's
responsibility to provide funding'' and the state, local, or tribal
governments ``lack authority'' to adjust accordingly.
``Federal private sector mandate'' includes a regulation that
``would impose an enforceable duty upon the private sector, except (i)
a condition of Federal assistance; or (ii) a duty arising from
participation in a voluntary Federal program.'' The designation of
critical habitat does not impose a legally binding duty on non-Federal
government entities or private parties. Under the ESA, the only
regulatory effect is that Federal agencies must ensure that their
actions do not destroy or adversely modify critical habitat under
section 7. While non-Federal entities who receive Federal funding,
assistance, permits, or otherwise require approval or authorization
from a Federal agency for an action may be indirectly impacted by the
designation of critical habitat, the legally binding duty to avoid
destruction or adverse modification of critical habitat rests squarely
on the Federal action agency. Furthermore, to the extent that non-
Federal entities are indirectly impacted,
[[Page 71727]]
because they receive a Federal permit or Federal assistance or
participate in a voluntary Federal aid program, the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act would not apply, nor would critical habitat shift the costs
of the large entitlement programs listed above to State governments.
2. This rule will not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments, because it will not produce a Federal mandate of $100
million or greater in any year; that is, it is not a ``significant
regulatory action'' under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act. The
proposed critical habitat designation falls within marine waters under
Federal or State of Alaska jurisdiction. The State of Alaska does not
fit the definition of a ``small governmental jurisdiction'' and thus a
Small Government Agency Plan is not required. Waters adjacent to
Native-owned lands are owned and managed by the State of Alaska.
Takings (E.O. 12630)
Under E.O. 12630, Federal agencies must consider the effects of
their actions on constitutionally protected private property rights and
avoid unnecessary takings of property. A taking of property includes
actions that result in physical invasion or occupancy of private
property, and regulations imposed on private property that
substantially affect its value or use. In accordance with E.O. 12630,
this proposed rule does not have significant takings implications. A
takings implication assessment is not required. The designation of
critical habitat affects only Federal agency actions. Private lands do
not exist within the proposed critical habitat and would not be
affected by this action.
Federalism (E.O. 13132)
In accordance with E.O. 13132 (Federalism), we determined that this
proposed rule does not have significant Federalism effects and that a
Federalism assessment is not required.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
This proposed rule does not contain new or revised information
collections that require approval by OMB under the Paperwork Reduction
Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). This proposed rule will not impose
recordkeeping or reporting requirements on state or local governments,
individuals, businesses, or organizations.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
Environmental analysis under NEPA for ESA critical habitat
designations is not required. See Douglas County v. Babbitt, 48 F.3d
1495 (9th Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 698 (1996).
Government-to-Government Relationship With Tribes
The longstanding and distinctive relationship between the Federal
and tribal governments is defined by treaties, statutes, executive
orders, judicial decisions, and co-management agreements, which
differentiate tribal governments from the other entities that deal
with, or are affected by, the Federal Government. This relationship has
given rise to a special Federal trust responsibility involving the
legal responsibilities and obligations of the United States toward
Indian tribes and the application of fiduciary standards of due care
with respect to Indian lands, tribal trust resources, and the exercise
of tribal rights. Executive Order 13175 on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments outlines the
responsibilities of the Federal Government in matters affecting tribal
interests. Section 161 of Public Law 108-199 (188 Stat. 452), as
amended by section 518 of Public Law 108-447 (118 Stat. 3267), directs
all Federal agencies to consult with Alaska Native corporations on the
same basis as Indian tribes under E.O. 13175.
As the entire proposed critical habitat area is located seaward of
the coast line of Alaska, no tribal-owned lands overlap with the
proposed designation. However, this proposed designation overlaps with
areas used by Alaska Natives for subsistence, cultural, and other
purposes. We coordinate with Alaska Native hunters regarding management
issues related to ice seals through the Ice Seal Committee (ISC), a co-
management organization under section 119 of the Marine Mammal
Protection Act. NMFS discussed the designation of critical habitat for
Arctic ringed seals with the ISC and provided updates regarding the
timeline for publication of this proposed rule. We also contacted
potentially affected tribes by mail and offered them the opportunity to
consult on the designation of critical habitat for the Arctic ringed
seal and discuss any concerns they may have. We received no requests
for consultation in response to this mailing. If we receive any such
requests in response to this proposed rule, we will respond to each
request prior to issuing a final rule.
References Cited
A complete list of all references cited in this rulemaking can be
found on the NMFS Alaska Region Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov and is available upon request from the NMFS
office in Juneau, Alaska (see ADDRESSES).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 226
Endangered and threatened species.
Dated: November 21, 2014.
Samuel. D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, we propose to amend 50 CFR
part 226 as follows:
PART 226--DESIGNATED CRITICAL HABITAT
0
1. The authority citation for part 226 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1533.
0
2. A new Sec. 226.226 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 226.226 Critical Habitat for the Arctic Subspecies (Phoca
hispida hispida) of the Ringed Seal (Phoca hispida).
Critical habitat is designated for the Arctic subspecies of the
ringed seal as depicted in the map below and described in paragraph (a)
of this section. Textual information is included for the purposes of
clarifying or refining the location and boundaries of the critical
habitat area.
(a) Critical habitat boundaries. Critical habitat includes all the
contiguous marine waters from the ``coast line'' of Alaska as that term
has been defined in the Submerged Lands Act (``the line of ordinary low
water along that portion of the coast which is in direct contact with
the open sea and the line marking the seaward limit of inland
waters''), 43 U.S.C. 1301(c), to an offshore limit within the U.S.
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). The boundary extends offshore from the
northern limit of the United States-Canada land border (from the
ordinary low water line of the Beaufort Sea at 141[deg] W. long.) and
follows the outer extent of the U.S. EEZ boundary north and slightly
northeastward; thence westerly and southwesterly; thence southerly and
southwesterly to 60[deg]31' N. lat., 179[deg]13' W. long. From there it
runs southeasterly to 58[deg]22' N. lat., 170[deg]27' W. long.; thence
easterly to 59[deg] N. lat., 164[deg] W. long. The boundary then
follows 164[deg] W. long. due north to the coast line of Alaska
southeast of Cape Avinof. Critical habitat does not include permanent
manmade structures such as boat ramps, docks, or pilings that were in
existence on or before the effective date of this rule.
(b) Essential features. The essential features for the conservation
of the Arctic ringed seal are:
[[Page 71728]]
(1) Sea ice habitat suitable for the formation and maintenance of
subnivean birth lairs used for sheltering pups during whelping and
nursing, which is defined as seasonal landfast (shorefast) ice, or
dense, stable pack ice, that has undergone deformation and contains
snowdrifts at least 54 cm deep.
(2) Sea ice habitat suitable as a platform for basking and molting,
which is defined as sea ice of 15 percent or more concentration.
(3) Primary prey resources to support Arctic ringed seals, which
are defined to be Arctic cod, saffron cod, shrimps, and amphipods.
(c) Critical habitat map. The proposed critical habitat boundary
was mapped using an Alaska Albers Equal Area Conic projection
referenced to the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD83). The map, as
clarified by the accompanying regulatory text, establishes the
boundaries of the critical habitat designation. The map, along with the
coordinates or plot points on which the map is based, is available to
the public on https://www.regulations.gov at Docket No. NOAA-NMFS-2013-
0114, on the NMFS Alaska region Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov, and at the NMFS office in Juneau, Alaska. The
map of critical habitat for the Arctic ringed seal follows:
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