Endangered and Threatened Species; Take of Anadromous Fish, 18824-18827 [2015-07944]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 67 / Wednesday, April 8, 2015 / Notices
Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ) for implementing the procedural
provisions of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA; 40
CFR parts 1500–1508) and to NOAA’s
Administrative Order 216–6 regarding
NOAA’s compliance with NEPA and the
CEQ regulations.
The Council and NMFS will consider
public comments received on the DEIS
in developing the final environmental
impact statement (FEIS), and before
voting to submit the final amendment to
NMFS for Secretarial review, approval,
and implementation under the
Magnuson-Stevens Conservation and
Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens
Act). NMFS will announce in the
Federal Register the availability of the
final amendment and FEIS for public
review during the Magnuson-Stevens
Act Secretarial review period, and will
consider all public comments prior to
final agency action to approve,
disapprove, or partially approve the
final amendment.
NMFS will announce, through a
document published in the Federal
Register, all public comment periods on
the final amendment, its proposed
implementing regulations, and the
availability of its associated FEIS. NMFS
will consider all public comments
received during the Secretarial review
period, whether they are on the final
amendment, the proposed regulations,
or the FEIS, prior to final agency action.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
The scoping meetings will be held via
webinar April 20, 2015, through April
23, 2015. A scoping meeting for
Snapper-Grouper Amendment 36 will
also be held in Key West, Florida, in
conjunction with the Council meeting
on June 10, 2015, beginning at 5:30 p.m.
With the exception of the scoping
meeting in Key West, Florida, all
scoping meetings will be conducted via
webinar accessible via the internet from
the Council’s Web site at
www.safmc.net. Scoping meetings held
via webinar will begin at 6 p.m.
Registration for each webinar is
required. Registration information will
be posted on the SAFMC Web site at
www.safmc.net as it becomes available.
Any graphics, including maps,
drawings, or images to be shown during
public comment should be emailed to
Mike Collins at mike.collins@safmc.net
prior to the public hearing. Webinar
registrants may test or confirm their
computer setup for the webinar one
hour prior to each hearing and contact
Mike Collins at 843–763–1050 to
address any questions regarding
webinar setup. Local comment stations
17:55 Apr 07, 2015
Scoping Meeting Dates and Local
Comment Station Addresses
1. April 20, 2015—Local Comment
Stations: SC Department of Natural
Resources, Marine Resources Research
Institute Auditorium, 217 Fort Johnson
Road, Charleston, SC 29422–2559;
phone 843–953–9300 and Holiday Inn
Express, 722 Highway 17, Little River,
SC 29566; phone: 843–281–9400.
2. April 21, 2015—Local Comment
Station: NC Division of Marine
Fisheries, Central District Office, 5285
Highway 70 West, Morehead City, NC
28557; phone 252–726–7021.
3. April 22, 2015: Local Comment
Station: Coastal Resources Division, GA
Department of Natural Resources, One
Conservation Way, Brunswick, GA
31528–8687; phone 912–264–7218 and
Richmond Hill Fish Hatchery, 110
Hatercry Drive, Richmond Hill, GA
31324; phone 912–756–3691.
4. April 23, 2015: Local Comment
Station: Hampton Inn Daytona
Speedway, 1715 W. International
Speedway Boulevard, Daytona Beach,
FL 32114; phone 386–257–4030.
5. June 10, 2015: A scoping meeting
will be held in conjunction with the
SAFMC meeting beginning at 5:30 p.m.;
Doubletree Grand Key Resort, 3990 S.
Roosevelt Blvd., Key West, FL 33040;
phone 305–293–1818.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Scoping Meetings
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will also be provided at the following
locations:
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Dated: April 2, 2015.
Emily H. Menashes,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2015–08057 Filed 4–7–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XD872
Endangered and Threatened Species;
Take of Anadromous Fish
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Applications for seven new
scientific research permits, two permit
modifications, and two permit renewals.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given that
NMFS has received 11 scientific
research permit application requests
relating to Pacific salmon and eulachon.
The proposed research is intended to
SUMMARY:
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increase knowledge of species listed
under the Endangered Species Act
(ESA) and to help guide management
and conservation efforts. The
applications may be viewed online at:
https://apps.nmfs.noaa.gov/preview/
preview_open_for_comment.cfm.
DATES: Comments or requests for a
public hearing on the applications must
be received at the appropriate address or
fax number (see ADDRESSES) no later
than 5 p.m. Pacific standard time on
May 8, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Written comments on the
applications should be sent to the
Protected Resources Division, NMFS,
1201 NE Lloyd Blvd., Suite 1100,
Portland, OR 97232–1274. Comments
may also be sent via fax to 503–230–
5441 or by email to nmfs.nwr.apps@
noaa.gov (include the permit number in
the subject line of the fax or email).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rob
Clapp, Portland, OR (ph.: 503–231–
2314), Fax: 503–230–5441, email:
Robert.Clapp@noaa.gov). Permit
application instructions are available
from the address above, or online at
https://apps.nmfs.noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Species Covered in This Notice
The following listed species are
covered in this notice:
Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha): Threatened Lower
Columbia River (LCR); threatened Puget
Sound (PS); threatened Snake River (SR)
fall-run; threatened SR spring/summerrun (spr/sum); endangered Upper
Columbia River (UCR) spring-run;
threatened Upper Willamette River
(UWR).
Steelhead (O. mykiss): Threatened
UCR; threatened SR; threatened middle
Columbia River (MCR); threatened LCR;
threatened PS; threatened UWR.
Sockeye salmon (O. nerka):
endangered SR.
Chum salmon (O. keta): Threatened
Columbia River (CR); threatened Hood
Canal summer (HCS).
Coho salmon (O. kisutch): Threatened
LCR; threatened Oregon Coast (OC).
Eulachon (Thaleichthys pacificus):
Threatened southern distinct population
segment (DPS) (S. eulachon).
Authority
Scientific research permits are issued
in accordance with section 10(a)(1)(A)
of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1531 et. seq) and
regulations governing listed fish and
wildlife permits (50 CFR parts 222–226).
NMFS issues permits based on findings
that such permits: (1) Are applied for in
good faith; (2) if granted and exercised,
would not operate to the disadvantage
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of the listed species that are the subject
of the permit; and (3) are consistent
with the purposes and policy of section
2 of the ESA. The authority to take
listed species is subject to conditions set
forth in the permits.
Anyone requesting a hearing on an
application listed in this notice should
set out the specific reasons why a
hearing on that application would be
appropriate (see ADDRESSES). Such
hearings are held at the discretion of the
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
NMFS.
Applications Received
Permit 14046–3M
The King County Department of
Natural Resources and Parks (KCDNRP)
is seeking to modify a five-year permit
to annually take juvenile PS Chinook
salmon and PS steelhead. Sampling
sites would be in four Puget Sound subbasins (Snoqualmie, Lake Washington,
Duwamish, and Puyallup) located in
King County, Washington. The purpose
of the study is to: (1) Evaluate the
effectiveness of restoration actions
through biological monitoring, (2)
understand the importance of offchannel habitats in providing habitat for
listed species, (3) assess salmonid
habitat status and trends in small
streams with varying degrees of land
use, and (4) assess containment levels in
various freshwater fish eaten by
humans. The research would benefit the
affected species by determining if
restoration and recovery actions are
contributing to listed species recovery,
providing information on use of offchannel areas by juvenile salmonids,
guiding future projects based upon
monitoring results, and providing
habitat use information for yearling fall
Chinook. The KCDNRP proposes to
capture fish using beach seines, fyke
nets, gill nets, hook and line, minnow
traps, and both backpack and boatoperated electrofishing. Fish would be
anaesthetized, identified by species,
allowed to recover, and released. The
researchers do not propose to kill any of
the listed salmonids being captured, but
a small number may die as an
unintended result of the activities.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Permit 16142—3R
The Confederated Tribes of the Warm
Springs Reservation of Oregon
(CTWSRO) are seeking to renew a fiveyear permit that currently allows them
to capture, handle, and release juvenile
MCR steelhead in the John Day River,
Oregon. The primary purpose of the
research is to monitor anadromous fish
response to habitat restoration projects
throughout the John Day Basin, however
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the permit was modified in 2012 to
allow the CTWSRO are to expand upon
that research by adding juvenile mark/
recapture studies and adult spawning
surveys in various drainages in the John
Day River Basin for the purpose of
determining adult return success and
making juvenile abundance estimates.
This project would establish baseline
estimates at 10 sampling locations and
then resample those sites to evaluate the
impact restoration projects have on
juvenile Chinook and steelhead
abundance. The research would
continue to benefit the fish by helping
managers determine the most effective
ways to restore habitat.
Under the permit, the researchers
would set up survey reaches at each site
and use block nets at the upstream and
downstream boundaries to temporarily
curtail fish movement. In those reaches,
fish would be collected using backpack
electrofishing equipment or seine nets.
Once the fish are collected, they would
be placed in an aerated bucket and
anesthetized. They would then be
counted, measured, weighed, marked
with a caudal fin clip, allowed to
recover, and released back into the
sampling reach. A second fish sampling
event (using the same collection
methods) would be conducted within 24
hours of each initial survey. The
researchers would use these two
samples to estimate fish abundance and
density. The surveys would be
conducted at the same locations on an
annual basis in order to assess
population trends. The researchers do
not intend to kill any listed salmonids,
but a small number may die as an
unintended result of the activities.
Permit 16298—3R
The Shoshone-Bannock Tribes (SBT)
are seeking to renew for five years a
permit that has been in place since
2011. Under the renewed permit, they
would annually take juvenile and adult
SR spr/sum Chinook and SR steelhead
in Bear Valley Creek, Idaho. The
purpose of the research is to estimate
fish abundance, smolt-to-adult return
rates, and adult productivity in Bear
Valley Creek with a high degree of
accuracy. The researchers are seeking to
generate information that may be used
widely throughout the Salmon River
subbasin. This monitoring project was
recommended as part of a larger
monitoring effort that developed
through the Columbia Basin
Coordinated Anadromous Monitoring
Workshop. The work would benefit fish
by giving managers key information
about population status in the Salmon
River subbasin which, in turn, would be
used to inform recovery plans and land-
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management activities. The SBT would
count and monitor adult spr/sum
Chinook at a video station, and they
would handle, measure, tag, and tissue
sample juvenile SR spr/sum Chinook
and steelhead at a screw trap. They
would also do some harvest monitoring
(creel surveys) and spawning ground
surveys. The researchers do not intend
to kill any listed salmonids, but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of the activities. In addition to this
permit, the U.S. Forest Service (FS)
would issue a special use permit for the
SBT to conduct the work.
Permit 18819–2M
The Wild Fish Conservancy (WFC) is
seeking to modify a five-year permit to
annually take juvenile and adult PS
Chinook salmon, HCS chum salmon,
and PS steelhead. The WFC research
may also cause them to take adult S
eulachon, for which there are currently
no ESA take prohibitions. The sampling
would take place in locations
throughout Hood Canal, Admiralty
Inlet, and the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The
purpose of the study is to determine the
relative abundance, distribution, and
emigration timing of juvenile HCS chum
salmon throughout their range. The
research would benefit the affected
species by determining juvenile
salmonid out-migrant timing, use of
nearshore rearing habitats, and key
habitat associations (i.e. eelgrass and
kelp beds, gravel beaches, mudflats, and
modified vs. unmodified shorelines).
The WFC proposes to capture fish using
fyke nets and beach seines with twicemonthly sampling from December
through May. Captured salmonids
would be identified by species,
measured, and have a tissue sample
taken (chum and Chinook salmon only).
Juvenile coded-wire tagged (CWT) coho
and Chinook salmon would be
sacrificed to determine their natal
hatchery and provide stock-specific
information about their use of nearshore
habitats. All other fish would be
released after handling. The researchers
do not propose to kill any other listed
species being captured, but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of the activities.
Permit 18921
The Samish Indian Nation
Department of Natural Resources
(SINDNR) is seeking a five-year research
permit to annually take juvenile PS
Chinook salmon and PS steelhead. The
SINDNR research may also cause them
to take adult S eulachon, for which
there are currently no ESA take
prohibitions. The sampling would take
place adjacent to Cypress Island (of the
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San Juan Island archipelago) in Secret
Harbor. The restoration of Secret Harbor
began in 2008 with the restoration of an
agricultural field to its historical state by
breaching an existing tidal dike and
restoring tidal exchange and freshwater
stream connectivity to the area. The
restored estuary and salt marsh habitats
are expected to enhance and improve
structural habitat complexity and
potentially support a greater diversity of
species. The purpose of the study is to
determine fish presence both within and
around the Secret Harbor estuary
restoration site to determine the
effectiveness of restoration efforts. This
research would benefit the affected
species by informing future restoration
designs as well as providing data to
support future enhancement projects.
The SINDAR proposes to capture fish
using beach seines with year-round
monthly sampling. Fish would be
captured, identified by species,
measured, and released. The researchers
do not propose to kill any of the listed
fish being captured, but a small number
may die as an unintended result of the
activities.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Permit 18952
The United States Geological Survey
(USGS) has requested a one-year permit
to take LCR Chinook, LCR coho, LCR
steelhead, CR chum, UWR Chinook,
UWR steelhead, PS Chinook, and PS
steelhead while conducting the National
Water Quality Monitoring Program. The
purpose of the USGS study is to
characterize contaminants, nutrients,
suspended and fine sediment, and
ecological communities at perennialstream sites in the Willamette Valley
and Puget Sound Lowlands. The
ecological community surveys would
consist of double pass backpack
electrofishing of approximately 100 sites
in June and July. The majority of the
listed salmonids that may be captured
would be measured, examined for
external abnormalities, and released. A
secondary survey would be conducted
to collect and sacrifice up to 15
salmonids per site from a total of 15
sites. Depending on availability, fish
collections would focus on unlisted
juvenile coho salmon or cutthroat trout
in the Puget Sound and Upper
Willamette basins and cutthroat trout or
listed juvenile coho in the Lower
Willamette and Lower Columbia basins.
The research may benefit the listed
species by helping managers to better
understand the stressors—such as
contaminant loads—affecting ecological
stream communities in urban areas.
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Permit 19263
The Idaho Department of Fish and
Game (IDFG) is seeking a five-year
permit to take juvenile SR steelhead,
sockeye, and spr/sum Chinook during
the course of three research tasks in the
upper Salmon River of Idaho State.
They would (a) conduct a general fish
population inventory, (b) monitor fish
population responses to habitat
improvement and restoration activities,
and (c) document juvenile Chinook
salmon rearing and winter habitat use in
the Salmon River. The researchers
would use drift boat and raft-mounted
electrofishing gear to capture fish and
estimate trout abundances in up to five
monitoring reaches of the Salmon River
during the fall. Captured fish would be
identified by species, measured (total
length & fork length), and weighed to
the nearest gram. During marking runs,
captured target species (rainbow trout,
westslope cutthroat trout, bull trout, and
mountain whitefish) would be marked
with a hole punch in the caudal fin.
Any juvenile Chinook salmon they
encounter would be identified,
measured (fork length), weighed, and
examined for tags/marks. Unmarked
juvenile Chinook salmon would be
implanted with passive integrated
transponder (PIT) tags. Some captured
fish may be anesthetized to minimize
stress. In all cases, adult salmonids
would be avoided and none would be
captured. To help with this, the
researchers would operate at times and
in locations where no adults are likely
to be present. The research activities
would benefit the fish by providing
information on a suite of factors—
population abundance and response to
restoration actions, predator and
competitor abundance and interactions,
and life history and behavior
characteristics—all of which would be
used to inform management, restoration,
and recovery decisions in the Salmon
River. The researchers do not intend to
kill any fish, but a small number may
die as a consequence of the planned
activities.
Permit 19350
The United States Fish and Wildlife
Service (FWS) has requested a five-year
permit to take LCR Chinook salmon,
LCR Coho salmon, LCR steelhead, UWR
Chinook salmon, and UWR steelhead
while conducting research and
monitoring in the Tryon Creek
watershed of Portland, Oregon. The
purpose of the project is to assess fish
use of Tryon Creek above and below the
Oregon Highway 43 culvert. Culvert
modification and habitat enhancement
projects have been implemented to
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improve fish passage and the research
and monitoring would be used to gauge
effectiveness of the restoration
activities. The FWS would capture fish
using backpack electrofishing
equipment and beach seines. Captured
fish would be measured, weighed, PITtagged, and tissue sampled for genetic
analysis. The FWS does not intend to
kill any of the salmonids being captured
but a small number of juvenile fish may
die as an unintended result of the
activities. The research may benefit the
listed species by helping managers
better understand the effectiveness of
habitat restoration activities.
Permit 19386
The AMEC Foster Wheel (AMECFW)
is seeking a five-year research permit to
annually take juvenile PS Chinook
salmon and PS steelhead in the Lower
Duwamish River waterway. Under a
Consent Decree settled through U.S.
District Court (Western District of
Washington), The Boeing Company
agreed to construct two habitat
restoration projects near Boeing Plant 2
in the Lower Duwamish Waterway to
restore and create off-channel and
riparian habitats in an area where they
have been largely eliminated due to
channelization and industrialization.
The purpose of this study is to
determine if fish, including ESA listed
juvenile salmonids, are using the newly
created/restored habitat. This research
would benefit the affected species by
informing future restoration designs as
well as providing data to support future
enhancement projects. The researchers
propose to capture fish using fyke nets
during the spring salmonid
outmigration (March through June). Fish
would be anaesthetized, identified by
species, allowed to recover, and
released. The researchers do not
propose to kill any of the listed fish
being captured, but a small number may
die as an unintended result of the
activities.
Permit 19391
The SBT are seeking a five-year
permit to annually take adult and
juvenile SR steelhead and spr/sum
Chinook while operating a screw trap
and adult weir in Panther Creek, Idaho.
They would also conduct some
electrofishing and spawning ground
surveys in the area. Most of the juvenile
Chinook salmon would be captured,
handled, and released. Some of them
would be implanted with PIT-tags, and
some would be sampled for genetic
analysis. All would be allowed to
recover and released to continue their
downstream migration. Although the
researchers are targeting Chinook, some
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juvenile and adult steelhead may be
taken as well. In both instances, the
information to be gathered would help
with monitoring and recovery efforts in
the area. In addition, the information
may eventually be used to help guide a
proposed supplementation program in
the area. The research would in no way
pre-dispose the approval of such a
program, but if it were to be instituted,
a good deal of the proposed work would
be analyzed again in the context of that
larger program. In the interim, the
research would benefit the fish by
helping managers guide current and
future restoration efforts and generating
information on species status that
would augment a number of regional
efforts. The researchers do not propose
to kill any of the animals being
captured, but a small number may die
as an unintended consequence of the
activities.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Permit 19470
The Washington State Department of
Ecology (WDOE) is seeking a three-year
permit to collect environmental samples
in rivers and streams in the state of
Washington while conducting
Washington’s Status and Trends
Monitoring for Watershed Health and
Salmon Recovery—a statewide habitat
and biological monitoring program. The
permit would authorize the WDOE to
take juvenile and adult UCR Chinook
salmon and steelhead, SR spr/sum and
fall-run Chinook salmon, SR steelhead,
SR sockeye salmon, and MCR steelhead.
The goal of status and trends monitoring
is to provide quantitative, statistically
valid estimates of habitat and water
quality that are important for policy and
management decisions. The WDOE
would monitor seven status and trends
regions statewide on a four-year cycle.
The information gathered by this
research would benefit listed salmonids
by helping resource managers evaluate
the effectiveness of habitat restoration
efforts and monitor aquatic species
status and trends. The researchers
would capture fish using boat
electrofishing equipment; the listed fish
would be enumerated, measured, and
released immediately. At no time would
adults be electrofished. If any adults are
seen during the electrofishing operation,
the equipment would immediately be
turned off and the fish would be
allowed to escape. If another adult is
seen, the researchers would move the
operation. And in no case would the
electrofishing take place where fish are
actively spawning. The researchers are
not proposing to kill any of the fish they
capture, but a small number may die as
an unintended result of the activities.
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17:55 Apr 07, 2015
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Permit 19476
Dated: April 2, 2015.
Angela Somma,
Chief, Endangered Species Division, Office
of Protected Resources, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2015–07944 Filed 4–7–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
COMMITTEE FOR THE
IMPLEMENTATION OF TEXTILE
AGREEMENTS
Determination Under the Textile and
Apparel Commercial Availability
Provision of the Dominican RepublicCentral America-United States Free
Trade Agreement (‘‘CAFTA–DR
Agreement’’)
The Committee for the
Implementation of Textile Agreements.
ACTION: Determination to remove a
product currently included in Annex
3.25 of the CAFTA–DR Agreement.
AGENCY:
PO 00000
October 5, 2015.
Frm 00022
Fmt 4703
The Committee for the
Implementation of Textile Agreements
(‘‘CITA’’) has determined that certain
three-thread circular knit fleece fabrics,
as specified below, are available in the
CAFTA–DR countries in commercial
quantities in a timely manner. The
product, which is currently included in
Annex 3.25 of the CAFTA–DR
Agreement in unrestricted quantities,
will be removed, effective 180 days after
publication of this notice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laurie Mease, Office of Textiles and
Apparel, U.S. Department of Commerce,
(202) 482–2043. For information online
see https://web.ita.doc.gov/tacgi/
CaftaReqTrack.nsf under ‘‘Approved
Requests,’’ Reference number: 195.2015.
02.27.Fabric.SS&AforGildanUSA.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
The Island County Department of
Natural Resources (ICDNR) is seeking a
five-year research permit to annually
take juvenile PS Chinook salmon and PS
steelhead. The sampling would take
place in the Fidalgo Island and northern
Whidbey Island shoreline area near
Deception Pass at Cornet Bay and Ala
Spit. The purpose of the study is to
assess salmonid and forage fish use of
habitat restored by removal of armoring
and fill. This research would benefit the
affected species by informing future
restoration designs as well as providing
data to support future enhancement
projects. The ICDNR proposes to capture
fish using a beach seine. Fish would be
removed from the net and placed in
buckets. All fish would be enumerated
by species and the first 20 of each
species would be measured for length.
All fish would be released in the same
location they were caught. The
researchers do not propose to kill any of
the listed salmonids being captured, but
a small number may die as an
unintended result of the activities.
This notice is provided pursuant to
section 10(c) of the ESA. NMFS will
evaluate the applications, associated
documents, and comments submitted to
determine whether the applications
meet the requirements of section 10(a)
of the ESA and Federal regulations. The
final permit decisions will not be made
until after the end of the 30-day
comment period. NMFS will publish
notice of its final action in the Federal
Register.
DATES:
18827
Sfmt 4703
Authority: The CAFTA–DR Agreement;
Section 203(o)(4) of the Dominican RepublicCentral America-United States Free Trade
Agreement Implementation Act (‘‘CAFTA–
DR Implementation Act’’), Public Law 109–
53; the Statement of Administrative Action
accompanying the CAFTA–DR
Implementation Act; and Presidential
Proclamation 7987 (February 28, 2006).
Background: The CAFTA–DR
Agreement provides a list in Annex 3.25
for fabrics, yarns, and fibers that the
Parties to the CAFTA–DR Agreement
have determined are not available in
commercial quantities in a timely
manner in the territory of any Party. The
CAFTA–DR Agreement provides that
this list may be modified pursuant to
Article 3.25(4)–(5) by adding or
removing items when the United States
determines that a fabric, yarn, or fiber is
not available in commercial quantities
in a timely manner in the territory of
any Party; or when the United States
determines that a fabric, yarn, or fiber
currently on the list is available in
commercial quantities in a timely
manner. The CAFTA–DR
Implementation Act authorizes the
President to make such modifications to
the list in Annex 3.25. See Annex 3.25
of the CAFTA–DR Agreement; see also
section 203(o)(4)(C) and (E) of the
CAFTA–DR Implementation Act.
The CAFTA–DR Implementation Act
requires the President to establish
procedures governing the submission of
a request and providing opportunity for
interested entities to submit comments
and supporting evidence before a
commercial availability determination is
made. In Presidential Proclamation
7987, the President delegated to CITA
the authority under section 203(o)(4) of
the CAFTA–DR Implementation Act for
modifying the list in Annex 3.25.
Pursuant to this authority, CITA
E:\FR\FM\08APN1.SGM
08APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 67 (Wednesday, April 8, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 18824-18827]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-07944]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XD872
Endangered and Threatened Species; Take of Anadromous Fish
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Applications for seven new scientific research permits, two
permit modifications, and two permit renewals.
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SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that NMFS has received 11 scientific
research permit application requests relating to Pacific salmon and
eulachon. The proposed research is intended to increase knowledge of
species listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and to help guide
management and conservation efforts. The applications may be viewed
online at: https://apps.nmfs.noaa.gov/preview/preview_open_for_comment.cfm.
DATES: Comments or requests for a public hearing on the applications
must be received at the appropriate address or fax number (see
ADDRESSES) no later than 5 p.m. Pacific standard time on May 8, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Written comments on the applications should be sent to the
Protected Resources Division, NMFS, 1201 NE Lloyd Blvd., Suite 1100,
Portland, OR 97232-1274. Comments may also be sent via fax to 503-230-
5441 or by email to nmfs.nwr.apps@noaa.gov (include the permit number
in the subject line of the fax or email).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rob Clapp, Portland, OR (ph.: 503-231-
2314), Fax: 503-230-5441, email: Robert.Clapp@noaa.gov). Permit
application instructions are available from the address above, or
online at https://apps.nmfs.noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Species Covered in This Notice
The following listed species are covered in this notice:
Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha): Threatened Lower
Columbia River (LCR); threatened Puget Sound (PS); threatened Snake
River (SR) fall-run; threatened SR spring/summer-run (spr/sum);
endangered Upper Columbia River (UCR) spring-run; threatened Upper
Willamette River (UWR).
Steelhead (O. mykiss): Threatened UCR; threatened SR; threatened
middle Columbia River (MCR); threatened LCR; threatened PS; threatened
UWR.
Sockeye salmon (O. nerka): endangered SR.
Chum salmon (O. keta): Threatened Columbia River (CR); threatened
Hood Canal summer (HCS).
Coho salmon (O. kisutch): Threatened LCR; threatened Oregon Coast
(OC).
Eulachon (Thaleichthys pacificus): Threatened southern distinct
population segment (DPS) (S. eulachon).
Authority
Scientific research permits are issued in accordance with section
10(a)(1)(A) of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1531 et. seq) and regulations
governing listed fish and wildlife permits (50 CFR parts 222-226). NMFS
issues permits based on findings that such permits: (1) Are applied for
in good faith; (2) if granted and exercised, would not operate to the
disadvantage
[[Page 18825]]
of the listed species that are the subject of the permit; and (3) are
consistent with the purposes and policy of section 2 of the ESA. The
authority to take listed species is subject to conditions set forth in
the permits.
Anyone requesting a hearing on an application listed in this notice
should set out the specific reasons why a hearing on that application
would be appropriate (see ADDRESSES). Such hearings are held at the
discretion of the Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, NMFS.
Applications Received
Permit 14046-3M
The King County Department of Natural Resources and Parks (KCDNRP)
is seeking to modify a five-year permit to annually take juvenile PS
Chinook salmon and PS steelhead. Sampling sites would be in four Puget
Sound sub-basins (Snoqualmie, Lake Washington, Duwamish, and Puyallup)
located in King County, Washington. The purpose of the study is to: (1)
Evaluate the effectiveness of restoration actions through biological
monitoring, (2) understand the importance of off-channel habitats in
providing habitat for listed species, (3) assess salmonid habitat
status and trends in small streams with varying degrees of land use,
and (4) assess containment levels in various freshwater fish eaten by
humans. The research would benefit the affected species by determining
if restoration and recovery actions are contributing to listed species
recovery, providing information on use of off-channel areas by juvenile
salmonids, guiding future projects based upon monitoring results, and
providing habitat use information for yearling fall Chinook. The KCDNRP
proposes to capture fish using beach seines, fyke nets, gill nets, hook
and line, minnow traps, and both backpack and boat-operated
electrofishing. Fish would be anaesthetized, identified by species,
allowed to recover, and released. The researchers do not propose to
kill any of the listed salmonids being captured, but a small number may
die as an unintended result of the activities.
Permit 16142--3R
The Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon
(CTWSRO) are seeking to renew a five-year permit that currently allows
them to capture, handle, and release juvenile MCR steelhead in the John
Day River, Oregon. The primary purpose of the research is to monitor
anadromous fish response to habitat restoration projects throughout the
John Day Basin, however the permit was modified in 2012 to allow the
CTWSRO are to expand upon that research by adding juvenile mark/
recapture studies and adult spawning surveys in various drainages in
the John Day River Basin for the purpose of determining adult return
success and making juvenile abundance estimates. This project would
establish baseline estimates at 10 sampling locations and then resample
those sites to evaluate the impact restoration projects have on
juvenile Chinook and steelhead abundance. The research would continue
to benefit the fish by helping managers determine the most effective
ways to restore habitat.
Under the permit, the researchers would set up survey reaches at
each site and use block nets at the upstream and downstream boundaries
to temporarily curtail fish movement. In those reaches, fish would be
collected using backpack electrofishing equipment or seine nets. Once
the fish are collected, they would be placed in an aerated bucket and
anesthetized. They would then be counted, measured, weighed, marked
with a caudal fin clip, allowed to recover, and released back into the
sampling reach. A second fish sampling event (using the same collection
methods) would be conducted within 24 hours of each initial survey. The
researchers would use these two samples to estimate fish abundance and
density. The surveys would be conducted at the same locations on an
annual basis in order to assess population trends. The researchers do
not intend to kill any listed salmonids, but a small number may die as
an unintended result of the activities.
Permit 16298--3R
The Shoshone-Bannock Tribes (SBT) are seeking to renew for five
years a permit that has been in place since 2011. Under the renewed
permit, they would annually take juvenile and adult SR spr/sum Chinook
and SR steelhead in Bear Valley Creek, Idaho. The purpose of the
research is to estimate fish abundance, smolt-to-adult return rates,
and adult productivity in Bear Valley Creek with a high degree of
accuracy. The researchers are seeking to generate information that may
be used widely throughout the Salmon River subbasin. This monitoring
project was recommended as part of a larger monitoring effort that
developed through the Columbia Basin Coordinated Anadromous Monitoring
Workshop. The work would benefit fish by giving managers key
information about population status in the Salmon River subbasin which,
in turn, would be used to inform recovery plans and land-management
activities. The SBT would count and monitor adult spr/sum Chinook at a
video station, and they would handle, measure, tag, and tissue sample
juvenile SR spr/sum Chinook and steelhead at a screw trap. They would
also do some harvest monitoring (creel surveys) and spawning ground
surveys. The researchers do not intend to kill any listed salmonids,
but a small number may die as an unintended result of the activities.
In addition to this permit, the U.S. Forest Service (FS) would issue a
special use permit for the SBT to conduct the work.
Permit 18819-2M
The Wild Fish Conservancy (WFC) is seeking to modify a five-year
permit to annually take juvenile and adult PS Chinook salmon, HCS chum
salmon, and PS steelhead. The WFC research may also cause them to take
adult S eulachon, for which there are currently no ESA take
prohibitions. The sampling would take place in locations throughout
Hood Canal, Admiralty Inlet, and the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The
purpose of the study is to determine the relative abundance,
distribution, and emigration timing of juvenile HCS chum salmon
throughout their range. The research would benefit the affected species
by determining juvenile salmonid out-migrant timing, use of nearshore
rearing habitats, and key habitat associations (i.e. eelgrass and kelp
beds, gravel beaches, mudflats, and modified vs. unmodified
shorelines). The WFC proposes to capture fish using fyke nets and beach
seines with twice-monthly sampling from December through May. Captured
salmonids would be identified by species, measured, and have a tissue
sample taken (chum and Chinook salmon only). Juvenile coded-wire tagged
(CWT) coho and Chinook salmon would be sacrificed to determine their
natal hatchery and provide stock-specific information about their use
of nearshore habitats. All other fish would be released after handling.
The researchers do not propose to kill any other listed species being
captured, but a small number may die as an unintended result of the
activities.
Permit 18921
The Samish Indian Nation Department of Natural Resources (SINDNR)
is seeking a five-year research permit to annually take juvenile PS
Chinook salmon and PS steelhead. The SINDNR research may also cause
them to take adult S eulachon, for which there are currently no ESA
take prohibitions. The sampling would take place adjacent to Cypress
Island (of the
[[Page 18826]]
San Juan Island archipelago) in Secret Harbor. The restoration of
Secret Harbor began in 2008 with the restoration of an agricultural
field to its historical state by breaching an existing tidal dike and
restoring tidal exchange and freshwater stream connectivity to the
area. The restored estuary and salt marsh habitats are expected to
enhance and improve structural habitat complexity and potentially
support a greater diversity of species. The purpose of the study is to
determine fish presence both within and around the Secret Harbor
estuary restoration site to determine the effectiveness of restoration
efforts. This research would benefit the affected species by informing
future restoration designs as well as providing data to support future
enhancement projects. The SINDAR proposes to capture fish using beach
seines with year-round monthly sampling. Fish would be captured,
identified by species, measured, and released. The researchers do not
propose to kill any of the listed fish being captured, but a small
number may die as an unintended result of the activities.
Permit 18952
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) has requested a one-year
permit to take LCR Chinook, LCR coho, LCR steelhead, CR chum, UWR
Chinook, UWR steelhead, PS Chinook, and PS steelhead while conducting
the National Water Quality Monitoring Program. The purpose of the USGS
study is to characterize contaminants, nutrients, suspended and fine
sediment, and ecological communities at perennial-stream sites in the
Willamette Valley and Puget Sound Lowlands. The ecological community
surveys would consist of double pass backpack electrofishing of
approximately 100 sites in June and July. The majority of the listed
salmonids that may be captured would be measured, examined for external
abnormalities, and released. A secondary survey would be conducted to
collect and sacrifice up to 15 salmonids per site from a total of 15
sites. Depending on availability, fish collections would focus on
unlisted juvenile coho salmon or cutthroat trout in the Puget Sound and
Upper Willamette basins and cutthroat trout or listed juvenile coho in
the Lower Willamette and Lower Columbia basins. The research may
benefit the listed species by helping managers to better understand the
stressors--such as contaminant loads--affecting ecological stream
communities in urban areas.
Permit 19263
The Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) is seeking a five-year
permit to take juvenile SR steelhead, sockeye, and spr/sum Chinook
during the course of three research tasks in the upper Salmon River of
Idaho State. They would (a) conduct a general fish population
inventory, (b) monitor fish population responses to habitat improvement
and restoration activities, and (c) document juvenile Chinook salmon
rearing and winter habitat use in the Salmon River. The researchers
would use drift boat and raft-mounted electrofishing gear to capture
fish and estimate trout abundances in up to five monitoring reaches of
the Salmon River during the fall. Captured fish would be identified by
species, measured (total length & fork length), and weighed to the
nearest gram. During marking runs, captured target species (rainbow
trout, westslope cutthroat trout, bull trout, and mountain whitefish)
would be marked with a hole punch in the caudal fin. Any juvenile
Chinook salmon they encounter would be identified, measured (fork
length), weighed, and examined for tags/marks. Unmarked juvenile
Chinook salmon would be implanted with passive integrated transponder
(PIT) tags. Some captured fish may be anesthetized to minimize stress.
In all cases, adult salmonids would be avoided and none would be
captured. To help with this, the researchers would operate at times and
in locations where no adults are likely to be present. The research
activities would benefit the fish by providing information on a suite
of factors--population abundance and response to restoration actions,
predator and competitor abundance and interactions, and life history
and behavior characteristics--all of which would be used to inform
management, restoration, and recovery decisions in the Salmon River.
The researchers do not intend to kill any fish, but a small number may
die as a consequence of the planned activities.
Permit 19350
The United States Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) has requested a
five-year permit to take LCR Chinook salmon, LCR Coho salmon, LCR
steelhead, UWR Chinook salmon, and UWR steelhead while conducting
research and monitoring in the Tryon Creek watershed of Portland,
Oregon. The purpose of the project is to assess fish use of Tryon Creek
above and below the Oregon Highway 43 culvert. Culvert modification and
habitat enhancement projects have been implemented to improve fish
passage and the research and monitoring would be used to gauge
effectiveness of the restoration activities. The FWS would capture fish
using backpack electrofishing equipment and beach seines. Captured fish
would be measured, weighed, PIT-tagged, and tissue sampled for genetic
analysis. The FWS does not intend to kill any of the salmonids being
captured but a small number of juvenile fish may die as an unintended
result of the activities. The research may benefit the listed species
by helping managers better understand the effectiveness of habitat
restoration activities.
Permit 19386
The AMEC Foster Wheel (AMECFW) is seeking a five-year research
permit to annually take juvenile PS Chinook salmon and PS steelhead in
the Lower Duwamish River waterway. Under a Consent Decree settled
through U.S. District Court (Western District of Washington), The
Boeing Company agreed to construct two habitat restoration projects
near Boeing Plant 2 in the Lower Duwamish Waterway to restore and
create off-channel and riparian habitats in an area where they have
been largely eliminated due to channelization and industrialization.
The purpose of this study is to determine if fish, including ESA listed
juvenile salmonids, are using the newly created/restored habitat. This
research would benefit the affected species by informing future
restoration designs as well as providing data to support future
enhancement projects. The researchers propose to capture fish using
fyke nets during the spring salmonid outmigration (March through June).
Fish would be anaesthetized, identified by species, allowed to recover,
and released. The researchers do not propose to kill any of the listed
fish being captured, but a small number may die as an unintended result
of the activities.
Permit 19391
The SBT are seeking a five-year permit to annually take adult and
juvenile SR steelhead and spr/sum Chinook while operating a screw trap
and adult weir in Panther Creek, Idaho. They would also conduct some
electrofishing and spawning ground surveys in the area. Most of the
juvenile Chinook salmon would be captured, handled, and released. Some
of them would be implanted with PIT-tags, and some would be sampled for
genetic analysis. All would be allowed to recover and released to
continue their downstream migration. Although the researchers are
targeting Chinook, some
[[Page 18827]]
juvenile and adult steelhead may be taken as well. In both instances,
the information to be gathered would help with monitoring and recovery
efforts in the area. In addition, the information may eventually be
used to help guide a proposed supplementation program in the area. The
research would in no way pre-dispose the approval of such a program,
but if it were to be instituted, a good deal of the proposed work would
be analyzed again in the context of that larger program. In the
interim, the research would benefit the fish by helping managers guide
current and future restoration efforts and generating information on
species status that would augment a number of regional efforts. The
researchers do not propose to kill any of the animals being captured,
but a small number may die as an unintended consequence of the
activities.
Permit 19470
The Washington State Department of Ecology (WDOE) is seeking a
three-year permit to collect environmental samples in rivers and
streams in the state of Washington while conducting Washington's Status
and Trends Monitoring for Watershed Health and Salmon Recovery--a
statewide habitat and biological monitoring program. The permit would
authorize the WDOE to take juvenile and adult UCR Chinook salmon and
steelhead, SR spr/sum and fall-run Chinook salmon, SR steelhead, SR
sockeye salmon, and MCR steelhead. The goal of status and trends
monitoring is to provide quantitative, statistically valid estimates of
habitat and water quality that are important for policy and management
decisions. The WDOE would monitor seven status and trends regions
statewide on a four-year cycle. The information gathered by this
research would benefit listed salmonids by helping resource managers
evaluate the effectiveness of habitat restoration efforts and monitor
aquatic species status and trends. The researchers would capture fish
using boat electrofishing equipment; the listed fish would be
enumerated, measured, and released immediately. At no time would adults
be electrofished. If any adults are seen during the electrofishing
operation, the equipment would immediately be turned off and the fish
would be allowed to escape. If another adult is seen, the researchers
would move the operation. And in no case would the electrofishing take
place where fish are actively spawning. The researchers are not
proposing to kill any of the fish they capture, but a small number may
die as an unintended result of the activities.
Permit 19476
The Island County Department of Natural Resources (ICDNR) is
seeking a five-year research permit to annually take juvenile PS
Chinook salmon and PS steelhead. The sampling would take place in the
Fidalgo Island and northern Whidbey Island shoreline area near
Deception Pass at Cornet Bay and Ala Spit. The purpose of the study is
to assess salmonid and forage fish use of habitat restored by removal
of armoring and fill. This research would benefit the affected species
by informing future restoration designs as well as providing data to
support future enhancement projects. The ICDNR proposes to capture fish
using a beach seine. Fish would be removed from the net and placed in
buckets. All fish would be enumerated by species and the first 20 of
each species would be measured for length. All fish would be released
in the same location they were caught. The researchers do not propose
to kill any of the listed salmonids being captured, but a small number
may die as an unintended result of the activities.
This notice is provided pursuant to section 10(c) of the ESA. NMFS
will evaluate the applications, associated documents, and comments
submitted to determine whether the applications meet the requirements
of section 10(a) of the ESA and Federal regulations. The final permit
decisions will not be made until after the end of the 30-day comment
period. NMFS will publish notice of its final action in the Federal
Register.
Dated: April 2, 2015.
Angela Somma,
Chief, Endangered Species Division, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2015-07944 Filed 4-7-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P