Endangered and Threatened Species; Take of Anadromous Fish, 76565-76568 [2016-26530]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 213 / Thursday, November 3, 2016 / Notices
Jan Saunders, (302) 526–5251, at least 5
days prior to the meeting date.
Dated: October 28, 2016.
Tracey L. Thompson,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2016–26518 Filed 11–2–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[0648–XF008]
Endangered and Threatened Species;
Take of Anadromous Fish
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Applications for two new
scientific research permits and 13
permit renewals.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given that
NMFS has received 15 scientific
research permit application requests
relating to Pacific salmon, steelhead,
eulachon, and green sturgeon. 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
December 5, 2016.
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:
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SUMMARY:
Species Covered in This Notice
The following listed species are
covered in this notice:
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Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus
tshawytscha): Threatened Lower
Columbia River (LCR); threatened Puget
Sound (PS); threatened Snake River (SR)
spring/summer-run; threatened SR fallrun; endangered Upper Columbia River
(UCR) spring-run; threatened Upper
Willamette River (UWR).
Steelhead (O. mykiss): Threatened
LCR; threatened Middle Columbia River
(MCR); threatened PS; threatened SR;
threatened UCR; threatened UWR
Chum salmon (O. keta): Threatened
Hood Canal Summer-run (HCS);
threatened Columbia River (CR).
Coho salmon (O. kisutch): Threatened
LCR; threatened Oregon Coast (OC)
coho.
Sockeye salmon (O. nerka):
Threatened Ozette Lake (OL);
endangered SR.
Eulachon (Thaleichthys pacificus):
Threatened Southern (S).
Green sturgeon (Acipenser
medirostris): Threatened Southern (S).
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 222–226).
NMFS issues permits based on findings
that such permits: (1) Are applied for in
good faith; (2) if granted and exercised,
would not operate to the disadvantage
of the listed species 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 1135–9R
The United States Geological Survey
(USGS) is seeking to renew, for five
years, a research permit that currently
allows them to take juvenile LCR
steelhead in the Wind River subbasin
(Washington). The purpose of the USGS
study is to provide information on the
growth, survival, habitat use, and lifehistories of LCR steelhead. This
information would improve
understanding of habitat associations
and life history strategies for LCR
steelhead in the Wind River and that, in
turn, would help state, tribal, and
Federal efforts to restore LCR steelhead.
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The USGS proposes to capture juvenile
LCR steelhead using backpack
electrofishing equipment, hold the fish
in aerated buckets, anaesthetize them
with MS–222, measure length and
weight, tag age-0 and age-1 fish with
passive integrated transponders (PITtags), and release all fish at the site of
collection after they recover from
anesthesia. The researchers do not
propose to kill any fish but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of research activities.
Permit 1175–9R
The Gifford Pinchot National Forest
(GPNF) is seeking to renew, for five
years, a research permit that currently
allows them to take juvenile PS Chinook
salmon, PS steelhead, MCR steelhead,
LCR Chinook salmon, LCR coho salmon,
and LCR steelhead in the Middle
Columbia-Hood and Puyallup subbasins
(Washington). The purpose of this
research is to describe fish species
presence, distribution, spawning areas,
and habitat conditions on lands that the
GPNF administers. The GPNF and other
agencies would use that information in
forest management, habitat restoration,
and species recovery efforts. The GPNF
proposes to use backpack electrofishing
and seines to capture juvenile
salmonids, hold fish for short periods in
aerated buckets, identify, and then
release the fish. The researchers do not
propose to kill any fish, but a small
number may die as an unintentional
result of research activities.
Permit 1345–8R
The Washington State Department of
Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is seeking to
renew, for five years, a research permit
that currently allows them to take
juvenile and adult LCR Chinook salmon,
PS Chinook salmon, LCR coho salmon,
LCR steelhead, and PS steelhead. The
WDFW administers a multitude of water
bodies through the state of Washington,
and this permit would provide them
with coverage throughout Puget Sound
and the Lower Columbia River basin.
The purpose of the WDFW study is to
assess inland game fish communities
and thereby improve fishery
management. The research would
benefit salmonids by helping managers
write warm-water fish species harvest
regulations that reduce potential
impacts on listed salmonids. The
WDFW proposes to capture fish using
boat electrofishing, fyke nets, and
gillnets. After being captured, the listed
salmon and steelhead would be placed
in aerated live wells, identified, and
released. The researchers do not
propose to kill any listed fish being
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captured, but a small number may die
as an unintended result of the activities.
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Permit 1386–9R
The Washington Department of
Ecology (WDOE) is seeking to renew, for
five years, a research permit that
currently allows them to take juvenile
and adult LCR Chinook salmon, PS
Chinook salmon, SR spring/summer-run
Chinook salmon, SR fall-run Chinook
salmon, UCR spring-run Chinook
salmon, CR chum salmon, HC summerrun chum salmon, LCR coho salmon, OL
sockeye salmon, LCR steelhead, MCR
steelhead, PS steelhead, SR Basin
steelhead, and UCR steelhead
throughout the state of Washington. The
purpose of the research is to investigate
the occurrence and concentrations of
toxic contaminants in non-anadromous
freshwater fish tissue, sediment, and
water at sites throughout Washington.
The WDOE conducts this research in
order to meet Federal and state
regulatory requirements. This research
would benefit listed species by
identifying toxic contaminants in fish
and informing pollution control actions.
The WDOE proposes to capture fish
using various methods including
backpack and boat electrofishing, beach
seining, block, fyke, and gill netting,
and angling. All captured salmon and
steelhead would either be released
immediately or held temporarily in an
aerated live well to help them recover
before release. The researchers do not
propose to kill any fish but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of research activities.
Permit 1564–5R
The University of Washington (UW) is
seeking to renew, for five years, a
research permit that currently allows
them to take juvenile PS Chinook
salmon and PS steelhead. The purpose
of the UW study is to monitor the
success of habitat restoration projects in
the Duwamish River estuary, the
Snohomish River estuary, and Shilshole
Bay, Washington, by documenting
changes in population characteristics
among Chinook salmon in response to
estuarine habitat restoration actions.
The habitat restoration work would be
conducted by several entities, but
primarily by the Port of Seattle and the
City of Seattle. The habitat restoration
projects are designed to improve
habitats that Chinook salmon use for
rearing and migration. Monitoring the
restoration sites would help determine
the projects’ effectiveness and thereby
guide future restoration projects for the
benefit of listed salmonids in the area.
The UW proposes to capture fish using
enclosure nets and beach seines. The
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captured fish would be held in buckets
of aerated water. Juvenile salmonids
would be anesthetized, checked for
marks and tags, measured, and released.
Some individuals would have their
stomach contents sampled via nonlethal gastric lavage. The researchers do
not propose to kill any listed fish being
captured, but a small number may die
as an unintended result of the activities.
Permit 1585–4R
The Washington State Department of
Natural Resources (WDNR) is seeking to
renew, for five years, a research permit
that currently allows them to take
juvenile PS Chinook salmon, HCS chum
salmon, and PS steelhead. The work
would be carried out in many central
Puget Sound tributaries that originate in
the Olympic and Cascade Mountain
Ranges in Mason, Kitsap, King, Pierce,
Thurston, Snohomish, and Lewis
Counties, Washington. The purpose of
the WDNR study is to determine fish
presence or absence in streams greater
than two feet in width between ordinary
high water marks and with gradients of
less than 20 percent. The information
gathered would be used to determine
salmonid presence and distribution and
thereby inform land management
decisions on WDNR holdings. The
WDNR would use this information on
fish-bearing streams to benefit the
species by removing existing man-made
fish barriers or possibly replacing them
with structures that fish can pass over
or through. The WDNR proposes to
capture fish using backpack
electrofishing equipment. The captured
fish would be identified and released
back to the pools from which they came.
In some cases, the researchers may not
actually capture any fish, but would
merely note their presence. The
researchers do not propose to kill any
listed fish being captured, but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of the activities.
Permit 1587–5R
The USGS is seeking to renew a
research permit, for five years, that
currently allows them to take juvenile
HCS chum salmon, PS Chinook salmon,
and PS steelhead. The USGS research
may also cause them to take adult S
eulachon, for which there are currently
no ESA take prohibitions. The work
would take place in the northern Puget
Sound (San Juan Island and Samish
Bay), Whidbey Basin (Skagit Bay,
Snohomish River delta), southern Puget
Sound (Nisqually Delta), Admiralty
Inlet (including Foulweather Bluff,
Kilisut Harbor, and Oak Bay), and the
Strait of Juan de Fuca. The research
would be divided into two projects: (1)
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Restoration of Puget Sound Deltas and
other nearshore restoration sites and (2)
Effects of Urbanization on Nearshore
Ecosystems. The purpose of the USGS
study is to understand large river delta
ecosystems and the physio-chemical
processes related to nearshore habitat
alterations that modify trophic web,
community dynamics, and forage fish
populations. The USGS would sample
once per month in each area from April
through September, but extra sampling
(1–8 days per quarter) may sometimes
be needed. The USGS proposes to
capture fish primarily by using lampara
nets, but beach seines, dip nets, gill
nets, and angling may also be used. The
captured fish would be identified to
species, weighed, and measured. All
listed fish would be immediately
processed and released near their
capture location. Forage fish would be
counted, measured, weighed, and some
may be sacrificed for otoliths, genetics,
and fish health assays. All sampling
plans would be reviewed and approved
by the USGS Institutional Animal Care
and Use Committee before being
implemented. The researchers do not
propose to kill any listed fish being
captured, but a small number may die
as an unintended result of the activities.
Permit 1598–4R
The Washington State Department of
Transportation (WSDOT) is seeking to
renew, for five years, a research permit
that currently allows them to take
juvenile PS Chinook salmon, UCR
spring-run Chinook salmon, SR spring/
summer-run Chinook salmon, SR fallrun Chinook salmon, LCR Chinook
salmon, HCS chum salmon, CR chum
salmon, LCR coho salmon, OL sockeye
salmon, SR sockeye salmon, LCR
steelhead, PS steelhead, MCR steelhead,
SR steelhead, and UCR steelhead. The
WSDOT research may also cause them
to take eulachon, for which there are
currently no ESA take prohibitions.
Sample sites would be located
throughout the state of Washington. The
purpose of the WSDOT study is to
determine the distribution and diversity
of anadromous fish species in
waterbodies crossed by or adjacent to
the state transportation systems
(highways, railroads, and/or airports).
This information would be used to
assess the impacts that projects
proposed at those facilities may have on
listed species. The research would
benefit the listed species by helping
WSDOT minimize project impacts on
listed fish to the greatest extent possible.
Depending on the size of the stream
system, the WSDOT proposes to capture
fish using dip nets, stick seines, baited
gee minnow traps, or backpack
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electrofishing. The captured fish would
be identified to species and immediately
released. The researchers do not
propose to kill any listed fish being
captured, but a small number may die
as an unintended result of the activities.
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Permit 16069–2R
The City of Portland (COP) is seeking
to renew, for five years, a research
permit that currently allows them to
take juvenile and adult MCR steelhead,
UCR spring Chinook salmon, UCR
steelhead, SR spring/summer-run
Chinook salmon, SR fall-run Chinook
salmon, SR steelhead, SR sockeye
salmon, LCR Chinook salmon, LCR coho
salmon, LCR steelhead, CR chum
salmon, UWR Chinook salmon, UWR
steelhead, OC coho salmon, and S green
sturgeon in the Columbia and
Willamette rivers and tributaries
(Oregon). The COP research may also
cause them to take adult S eulachon, for
which there are currently no ESA take
prohibitions. This research is part of the
Portland Watershed Management Plan,
which aims to improve watershed
health in the Portland area. In this
program, project personnel sample 37
sites annually across all Portland
watersheds for hydrology, habitat, water
chemistry, and biological communities.
The research would benefit listed
salmonids by providing information to
assess watershed health, status of
critical habitat, effectiveness of
watershed restoration actions, and
compliance with regulatory
requirements. The City of Portland
proposes to capture juvenile fish using
backpack and boat electrofishing, hold
fish in a bucket of aerated water, take
caudal fin clips for genetic analysis, and
release fish at a point near their capture
site that would be chosen to minimize
the likelihood of recapture. The
researchers would avoid contact with
adult fish. The researchers do not
propose to kill any fish but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of research activities.
Permit 16666–2R
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
(FWS) is seeking to renew, for five
years, a research permit that currently
allows them to take juvenile LCR coho
salmon and adult LCR Chinook salmon
in Abernathy Creek (Washington). The
goal of this research is to determine the
natural reproductive success and
relative fitness of hatchery origin and
natural-origin steelhead and assess the
overall demographic effects of hatchery
fish supplementation in Abernathy
Creek relative to two adjacent control
streams. The research would benefit
listed salmonids by producing data to be
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used in hatchery and genetic
management plans. Steelhead are not
listed in these streams, but the FWS
have captured juvenile LCR coho
salmon and observed adult LCR
Chinook salmon in previous years. The
FWS proposes capture, handle, and
release juvenile LCR coho salmon
during backpack electrofishing surveys.
The researchers would avoid
electrofishing near adult coho and
Chinook salmon. The researchers do not
expect to kill any listed fish, but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of the research activities.
Permit 16702–3R
The Northwest Fisheries Science
Center (NWFSC) is seeking to renew for
five years a research permit that
currently allows them to take juvenile
PS Chinook salmon and PS steelhead.
The NWFSC research may also cause
them to take adult S eulachon, for
which there are currently no ESA take
prohibitions. The survey sites would be
located in the Snohomish River estuary.
The purpose of the NWFSC study is to
monitor habitat use of juvenile PS
Chinook salmon in response to estuary
restoration at the Qwuloolt restoration
site by levee breach and subsequent
tidal inundation in late 2015.
Specifically, the goals are to identify the
life history types present, their spatial
and temporal distribution, their feeding
ecology, and the interactions with other
biota. The research would benefit the
listed species by determining if the
restoration strategies are effective in
restoring fish habitat and populations.
Sampling would occur year round;
biweekly from February to September
and then once a month from October to
January. The NWFSC proposes to
capture fish using beach seines
(mainstem habitat) and fyke traps (tidal
channels). The researchers would
intentionally kill up to 15 juvenile PS
Chinook via a lethal dose of MS–222.
Specimens would be taken for stomach,
otolith, and other tissue sampling. Any
PS Chinook unintentionally killed
during the research would be used in
lieu of a fish that would otherwise be
sacrificed. All other juvenile PS
Chinook and all PS steelhead captured
would be counted, measured (fork
length), and released.
Permit 16866–3R
The Oregon State University (OSU)
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife is
seeking to renew, for five years, a
research permit that currently allows
them to take adult and juvenile LCR
Chinook salmon, LCR coho salmon, LCR
steelhead, CR chum salmon, UWR
Chinook salmon, UWR steelhead, MCR
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76567
steelhead, UCR spring Chinook salmon,
UCR steelhead, SR spring/summer-run
Chinook salmon, SR fall-run Chinook
salmon, and SR steelhead in the
Willamette River basin (Oregon). The
OSU research may also cause them to
take adult S eulachon, for which there
are currently no ESA take prohibitions.
Objectives of the study are to (1) assess
the status of native and non-native fish
communities, (2) implement long-term
monitoring, (3) compile and summarize
existing reports and unpublished data
on fish communities in the Willamette
River from OSU research, Oregon
Department of Fish and Wildlife
(ODFW) research, and EPA research,
and (4) measure water quality in known
cold water refugia to determine their
suitability as fish habitat. The study
would benefit listed salmonids by
providing data for state and Federal
collaborators to use in their
management and planning of
conservation, restoration, and recovery
efforts. The OSU researchers propose to
capture juvenile salmonids using
backpack and boat electrofishing, hold
fish in aerated fresh water, and then
identify, measure, and release juvenile
fish. Adult fish may be encountered but
would not be netted. The researchers do
not propose to kill any fish but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of research activities.
Permit 20492
The ODFW is seeking to renew, for
five years, a research permit for fisheries
research in the Willamette and
Columbia basins (Oregon) and on the
Oregon coast. ODFW proposes to take
juvenile UCR spring-run Chinook
salmon, UCR steelhead, SR spring/
summer-run Chinook salmon, SR fallrun Chinook salmon, SR Basin
steelhead, SR sockeye salmon, MCR
steelhead, LCR Chinook salmon, LCR
coho salmon, LCR steelhead, CR chum
salmon, UWR Chinook salmon, UWR
steelhead, and OC coho salmon, and
adult S green sturgeon. The ODFW
research may also cause them to take
adult S eulachon, for which there are
currently no ESA take prohibitions. The
new permit would cover the following
projects: (1) Warm-water and
Recreational Game Fish Management,
(2) District Fish Population Sampling in
the Upper Willamette Basin, and (3)
Salmonid Assessment and Monitoring
in the Deschutes River. The research
would provide information on fish
population structure, abundance,
genetics, disease occurrences, and
species interactions. This information
would be used to direct management
actions to benefit listed species. Juvenile
salmonids would be collected using
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boat electrofishing. Some fish would be
anesthetized, sampled for length and
weight, allowed to recover from the
anesthesia, and released. Most
salmonids would be allowed to swim
away after being electroshocked, or they
would be netted and released
immediately. The ODFW does not
intend to kill any of the fish being
captured, but a small number may die
as an unintended result of the activities.
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Permit 20535
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
(USACE) is seeking a three-year research
permit to annually take juvenile PS
Chinook salmon and PS steelhead in the
lower Duwamish River (Washington).
The USACE research may also cause
them to take adult S eulachon, for
which there are currently no ESA take
prohibitions. The purpose of the USACE
study is to collect starry flounder
(Platichthys stellatus) and shiner
surfperch (Cymatogaster aggregate) for
tissue sampling and PCB congener
analysis. The research would benefit the
listed species by enhancing the
understanding of contaminant
partitioning within the food web near
the Lower Duwamish Waterway
Superfund Site. The USACE proposes to
capture fish using beach seines. All
listed fish are released would be
captured, handled, and released. The
researchers do not propose to kill any
listed fish being captured, but a small
number may die as an unintended result
of the activities.
Permit 20659
The FWS is seeking a five-year
research permit to annually take
juvenile PS Chinook salmon and PS
steelhead from Lake Washington and its
tributaries (King County, Washington
state). The purposes of the FWS study
are (1) to test how attracted Chinook
salmon are to different types of artificial
lighting, and (2) to examine juvenile
Chinook salmon abundance and diets at
the mouths of two non-natal tributaries
in the City of Seattle. The research
would benefit the listed species by (1)
providing better information to land
resource managers on how best to
reduce the effects of nighttime artificial
lighting on juvenile Chinook salmon
while maintaining appropriate lighting
for safety considerations and (2)
understanding how juvenile Chinook
salmon use urban streams during base
flow conditions and after rain events.
The FWS proposes to capture fish using
beach seines. All PS steelhead and the
majority of the PS Chinook salmon
would be immediately released after
capture. A subset of the juvenile PS
Chinook would be anesthetized with
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MS–222, measured for length, undergo
gastric lavage (non-natal stream surveys
only), and released after they have
recovered. The researchers do not
propose to kill any listed fish 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: October 31, 2016.
Angela Somma,
Chief, Endangered Species Division, Office
of Protected Resources, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2016–26530 Filed 11–2–16; 8:45 am]
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or oral statements should be addressed
to Thomas Luebke, Secretary, U.S.
Commission of Fine Arts, at the above
address; by emailing cfastaff@cfa.gov; or
by calling 202–504–2200. Individuals
requiring sign language interpretation
for the hearing impaired should contact
the Secretary at least 10 days before the
meeting date.
Dated 24 October 2016, in Washington, DC.
Thomas Luebke,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–26306 Filed 11–2–16; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 213 (Thursday, November 3, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 76565-76568]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-26530]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[0648-XF008]
Endangered and Threatened Species; Take of Anadromous Fish
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Applications for two new scientific research permits and 13
permit renewals.
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SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that NMFS has received 15 scientific
research permit application requests relating to Pacific salmon,
steelhead, eulachon, and green sturgeon. 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 December 5,
2016.
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) spring/summer-run; threatened SR fall-run; endangered Upper
Columbia River (UCR) spring-run; threatened Upper Willamette River
(UWR).
Steelhead (O. mykiss): Threatened LCR; threatened Middle Columbia
River (MCR); threatened PS; threatened SR; threatened UCR; threatened
UWR
Chum salmon (O. keta): Threatened Hood Canal Summer-run (HCS);
threatened Columbia River (CR).
Coho salmon (O. kisutch): Threatened LCR; threatened Oregon Coast
(OC) coho.
Sockeye salmon (O. nerka): Threatened Ozette Lake (OL); endangered
SR.
Eulachon (Thaleichthys pacificus): Threatened Southern (S).
Green sturgeon (Acipenser medirostris): Threatened Southern (S).
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 222-226). NMFS
issues permits based on findings that such permits: (1) Are applied for
in good faith; (2) if granted and exercised, would not operate to the
disadvantage of the listed species 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 1135-9R
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) is seeking to renew, for
five years, a research permit that currently allows them to take
juvenile LCR steelhead in the Wind River subbasin (Washington). The
purpose of the USGS study is to provide information on the growth,
survival, habitat use, and life-histories of LCR steelhead. This
information would improve understanding of habitat associations and
life history strategies for LCR steelhead in the Wind River and that,
in turn, would help state, tribal, and Federal efforts to restore LCR
steelhead. The USGS proposes to capture juvenile LCR steelhead using
backpack electrofishing equipment, hold the fish in aerated buckets,
anaesthetize them with MS-222, measure length and weight, tag age-0 and
age-1 fish with passive integrated transponders (PIT-tags), and release
all fish at the site of collection after they recover from anesthesia.
The researchers do not propose to kill any fish but a small number may
die as an unintended result of research activities.
Permit 1175-9R
The Gifford Pinchot National Forest (GPNF) is seeking to renew, for
five years, a research permit that currently allows them to take
juvenile PS Chinook salmon, PS steelhead, MCR steelhead, LCR Chinook
salmon, LCR coho salmon, and LCR steelhead in the Middle Columbia-Hood
and Puyallup subbasins (Washington). The purpose of this research is to
describe fish species presence, distribution, spawning areas, and
habitat conditions on lands that the GPNF administers. The GPNF and
other agencies would use that information in forest management, habitat
restoration, and species recovery efforts. The GPNF proposes to use
backpack electrofishing and seines to capture juvenile salmonids, hold
fish for short periods in aerated buckets, identify, and then release
the fish. The researchers do not propose to kill any fish, but a small
number may die as an unintentional result of research activities.
Permit 1345-8R
The Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is
seeking to renew, for five years, a research permit that currently
allows them to take juvenile and adult LCR Chinook salmon, PS Chinook
salmon, LCR coho salmon, LCR steelhead, and PS steelhead. The WDFW
administers a multitude of water bodies through the state of
Washington, and this permit would provide them with coverage throughout
Puget Sound and the Lower Columbia River basin. The purpose of the WDFW
study is to assess inland game fish communities and thereby improve
fishery management. The research would benefit salmonids by helping
managers write warm-water fish species harvest regulations that reduce
potential impacts on listed salmonids. The WDFW proposes to capture
fish using boat electrofishing, fyke nets, and gillnets. After being
captured, the listed salmon and steelhead would be placed in aerated
live wells, identified, and released. The researchers do not propose to
kill any listed fish being
[[Page 76566]]
captured, but a small number may die as an unintended result of the
activities.
Permit 1386-9R
The Washington Department of Ecology (WDOE) is seeking to renew,
for five years, a research permit that currently allows them to take
juvenile and adult LCR Chinook salmon, PS Chinook salmon, SR spring/
summer-run Chinook salmon, SR fall-run Chinook salmon, UCR spring-run
Chinook salmon, CR chum salmon, HC summer-run chum salmon, LCR coho
salmon, OL sockeye salmon, LCR steelhead, MCR steelhead, PS steelhead,
SR Basin steelhead, and UCR steelhead throughout the state of
Washington. The purpose of the research is to investigate the
occurrence and concentrations of toxic contaminants in non-anadromous
freshwater fish tissue, sediment, and water at sites throughout
Washington. The WDOE conducts this research in order to meet Federal
and state regulatory requirements. This research would benefit listed
species by identifying toxic contaminants in fish and informing
pollution control actions. The WDOE proposes to capture fish using
various methods including backpack and boat electrofishing, beach
seining, block, fyke, and gill netting, and angling. All captured
salmon and steelhead would either be released immediately or held
temporarily in an aerated live well to help them recover before
release. The researchers do not propose to kill any fish but a small
number may die as an unintended result of research activities.
Permit 1564-5R
The University of Washington (UW) is seeking to renew, for five
years, a research permit that currently allows them to take juvenile PS
Chinook salmon and PS steelhead. The purpose of the UW study is to
monitor the success of habitat restoration projects in the Duwamish
River estuary, the Snohomish River estuary, and Shilshole Bay,
Washington, by documenting changes in population characteristics among
Chinook salmon in response to estuarine habitat restoration actions.
The habitat restoration work would be conducted by several entities,
but primarily by the Port of Seattle and the City of Seattle. The
habitat restoration projects are designed to improve habitats that
Chinook salmon use for rearing and migration. Monitoring the
restoration sites would help determine the projects' effectiveness and
thereby guide future restoration projects for the benefit of listed
salmonids in the area. The UW proposes to capture fish using enclosure
nets and beach seines. The captured fish would be held in buckets of
aerated water. Juvenile salmonids would be anesthetized, checked for
marks and tags, measured, and released. Some individuals would have
their stomach contents sampled via non-lethal gastric lavage. The
researchers do not propose to kill any listed fish being captured, but
a small number may die as an unintended result of the activities.
Permit 1585-4R
The Washington State Department of Natural Resources (WDNR) is
seeking to renew, for five years, a research permit that currently
allows them to take juvenile PS Chinook salmon, HCS chum salmon, and PS
steelhead. The work would be carried out in many central Puget Sound
tributaries that originate in the Olympic and Cascade Mountain Ranges
in Mason, Kitsap, King, Pierce, Thurston, Snohomish, and Lewis
Counties, Washington. The purpose of the WDNR study is to determine
fish presence or absence in streams greater than two feet in width
between ordinary high water marks and with gradients of less than 20
percent. The information gathered would be used to determine salmonid
presence and distribution and thereby inform land management decisions
on WDNR holdings. The WDNR would use this information on fish-bearing
streams to benefit the species by removing existing man-made fish
barriers or possibly replacing them with structures that fish can pass
over or through. The WDNR proposes to capture fish using backpack
electrofishing equipment. The captured fish would be identified and
released back to the pools from which they came. In some cases, the
researchers may not actually capture any fish, but would merely note
their presence. The researchers do not propose to kill any listed fish
being captured, but a small number may die as an unintended result of
the activities.
Permit 1587-5R
The USGS is seeking to renew a research permit, for five years,
that currently allows them to take juvenile HCS chum salmon, PS Chinook
salmon, and PS steelhead. The USGS research may also cause them to take
adult S eulachon, for which there are currently no ESA take
prohibitions. The work would take place in the northern Puget Sound
(San Juan Island and Samish Bay), Whidbey Basin (Skagit Bay, Snohomish
River delta), southern Puget Sound (Nisqually Delta), Admiralty Inlet
(including Foulweather Bluff, Kilisut Harbor, and Oak Bay), and the
Strait of Juan de Fuca. The research would be divided into two
projects: (1) Restoration of Puget Sound Deltas and other nearshore
restoration sites and (2) Effects of Urbanization on Nearshore
Ecosystems. The purpose of the USGS study is to understand large river
delta ecosystems and the physio-chemical processes related to nearshore
habitat alterations that modify trophic web, community dynamics, and
forage fish populations. The USGS would sample once per month in each
area from April through September, but extra sampling (1-8 days per
quarter) may sometimes be needed. The USGS proposes to capture fish
primarily by using lampara nets, but beach seines, dip nets, gill nets,
and angling may also be used. The captured fish would be identified to
species, weighed, and measured. All listed fish would be immediately
processed and released near their capture location. Forage fish would
be counted, measured, weighed, and some may be sacrificed for otoliths,
genetics, and fish health assays. All sampling plans would be reviewed
and approved by the USGS Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee
before being implemented. The researchers do not propose to kill any
listed fish being captured, but a small number may die as an unintended
result of the activities.
Permit 1598-4R
The Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) is
seeking to renew, for five years, a research permit that currently
allows them to take juvenile PS Chinook salmon, UCR spring-run Chinook
salmon, SR spring/summer-run Chinook salmon, SR fall-run Chinook
salmon, LCR Chinook salmon, HCS chum salmon, CR chum salmon, LCR coho
salmon, OL sockeye salmon, SR sockeye salmon, LCR steelhead, PS
steelhead, MCR steelhead, SR steelhead, and UCR steelhead. The WSDOT
research may also cause them to take eulachon, for which there are
currently no ESA take prohibitions. Sample sites would be located
throughout the state of Washington. The purpose of the WSDOT study is
to determine the distribution and diversity of anadromous fish species
in waterbodies crossed by or adjacent to the state transportation
systems (highways, railroads, and/or airports). This information would
be used to assess the impacts that projects proposed at those
facilities may have on listed species. The research would benefit the
listed species by helping WSDOT minimize project impacts on listed fish
to the greatest extent possible. Depending on the size of the stream
system, the WSDOT proposes to capture fish using dip nets, stick
seines, baited gee minnow traps, or backpack
[[Page 76567]]
electrofishing. The captured fish would be identified to species and
immediately released. The researchers do not propose to kill any listed
fish being captured, but a small number may die as an unintended result
of the activities.
Permit 16069-2R
The City of Portland (COP) is seeking to renew, for five years, a
research permit that currently allows them to take juvenile and adult
MCR steelhead, UCR spring Chinook salmon, UCR steelhead, SR spring/
summer-run Chinook salmon, SR fall-run Chinook salmon, SR steelhead, SR
sockeye salmon, LCR Chinook salmon, LCR coho salmon, LCR steelhead, CR
chum salmon, UWR Chinook salmon, UWR steelhead, OC coho salmon, and S
green sturgeon in the Columbia and Willamette rivers and tributaries
(Oregon). The COP research may also cause them to take adult S
eulachon, for which there are currently no ESA take prohibitions. This
research is part of the Portland Watershed Management Plan, which aims
to improve watershed health in the Portland area. In this program,
project personnel sample 37 sites annually across all Portland
watersheds for hydrology, habitat, water chemistry, and biological
communities. The research would benefit listed salmonids by providing
information to assess watershed health, status of critical habitat,
effectiveness of watershed restoration actions, and compliance with
regulatory requirements. The City of Portland proposes to capture
juvenile fish using backpack and boat electrofishing, hold fish in a
bucket of aerated water, take caudal fin clips for genetic analysis,
and release fish at a point near their capture site that would be
chosen to minimize the likelihood of recapture. The researchers would
avoid contact with adult fish. The researchers do not propose to kill
any fish but a small number may die as an unintended result of research
activities.
Permit 16666-2R
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is seeking to renew, for
five years, a research permit that currently allows them to take
juvenile LCR coho salmon and adult LCR Chinook salmon in Abernathy
Creek (Washington). The goal of this research is to determine the
natural reproductive success and relative fitness of hatchery origin
and natural-origin steelhead and assess the overall demographic effects
of hatchery fish supplementation in Abernathy Creek relative to two
adjacent control streams. The research would benefit listed salmonids
by producing data to be used in hatchery and genetic management plans.
Steelhead are not listed in these streams, but the FWS have captured
juvenile LCR coho salmon and observed adult LCR Chinook salmon in
previous years. The FWS proposes capture, handle, and release juvenile
LCR coho salmon during backpack electrofishing surveys. The researchers
would avoid electrofishing near adult coho and Chinook salmon. The
researchers do not expect to kill any listed fish, but a small number
may die as an unintended result of the research activities.
Permit 16702-3R
The Northwest Fisheries Science Center (NWFSC) is seeking to renew
for five years a research permit that currently allows them to take
juvenile PS Chinook salmon and PS steelhead. The NWFSC research may
also cause them to take adult S eulachon, for which there are currently
no ESA take prohibitions. The survey sites would be located in the
Snohomish River estuary. The purpose of the NWFSC study is to monitor
habitat use of juvenile PS Chinook salmon in response to estuary
restoration at the Qwuloolt restoration site by levee breach and
subsequent tidal inundation in late 2015. Specifically, the goals are
to identify the life history types present, their spatial and temporal
distribution, their feeding ecology, and the interactions with other
biota. The research would benefit the listed species by determining if
the restoration strategies are effective in restoring fish habitat and
populations. Sampling would occur year round; biweekly from February to
September and then once a month from October to January. The NWFSC
proposes to capture fish using beach seines (mainstem habitat) and fyke
traps (tidal channels). The researchers would intentionally kill up to
15 juvenile PS Chinook via a lethal dose of MS-222. Specimens would be
taken for stomach, otolith, and other tissue sampling. Any PS Chinook
unintentionally killed during the research would be used in lieu of a
fish that would otherwise be sacrificed. All other juvenile PS Chinook
and all PS steelhead captured would be counted, measured (fork length),
and released.
Permit 16866-3R
The Oregon State University (OSU) Department of Fisheries and
Wildlife is seeking to renew, for five years, a research permit that
currently allows them to take adult and juvenile LCR Chinook salmon,
LCR coho salmon, LCR steelhead, CR chum salmon, UWR Chinook salmon, UWR
steelhead, MCR steelhead, UCR spring Chinook salmon, UCR steelhead, SR
spring/summer-run Chinook salmon, SR fall-run Chinook salmon, and SR
steelhead in the Willamette River basin (Oregon). The OSU research may
also cause them to take adult S eulachon, for which there are currently
no ESA take prohibitions. Objectives of the study are to (1) assess the
status of native and non-native fish communities, (2) implement long-
term monitoring, (3) compile and summarize existing reports and
unpublished data on fish communities in the Willamette River from OSU
research, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) research, and
EPA research, and (4) measure water quality in known cold water refugia
to determine their suitability as fish habitat. The study would benefit
listed salmonids by providing data for state and Federal collaborators
to use in their management and planning of conservation, restoration,
and recovery efforts. The OSU researchers propose to capture juvenile
salmonids using backpack and boat electrofishing, hold fish in aerated
fresh water, and then identify, measure, and release juvenile fish.
Adult fish may be encountered but would not be netted. The researchers
do not propose to kill any fish but a small number may die as an
unintended result of research activities.
Permit 20492
The ODFW is seeking to renew, for five years, a research permit for
fisheries research in the Willamette and Columbia basins (Oregon) and
on the Oregon coast. ODFW proposes to take juvenile UCR spring-run
Chinook salmon, UCR steelhead, SR spring/summer-run Chinook salmon, SR
fall-run Chinook salmon, SR Basin steelhead, SR sockeye salmon, MCR
steelhead, LCR Chinook salmon, LCR coho salmon, LCR steelhead, CR chum
salmon, UWR Chinook salmon, UWR steelhead, and OC coho salmon, and
adult S green sturgeon. The ODFW research may also cause them to take
adult S eulachon, for which there are currently no ESA take
prohibitions. The new permit would cover the following projects: (1)
Warm-water and Recreational Game Fish Management, (2) District Fish
Population Sampling in the Upper Willamette Basin, and (3) Salmonid
Assessment and Monitoring in the Deschutes River. The research would
provide information on fish population structure, abundance, genetics,
disease occurrences, and species interactions. This information would
be used to direct management actions to benefit listed species.
Juvenile salmonids would be collected using
[[Page 76568]]
boat electrofishing. Some fish would be anesthetized, sampled for
length and weight, allowed to recover from the anesthesia, and
released. Most salmonids would be allowed to swim away after being
electroshocked, or they would be netted and released immediately. The
ODFW does not intend to kill any of the fish being captured, but a
small number may die as an unintended result of the activities.
Permit 20535
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is seeking a three-year
research permit to annually take juvenile PS Chinook salmon and PS
steelhead in the lower Duwamish River (Washington). The USACE research
may also cause them to take adult S eulachon, for which there are
currently no ESA take prohibitions. The purpose of the USACE study is
to collect starry flounder (Platichthys stellatus) and shiner surfperch
(Cymatogaster aggregate) for tissue sampling and PCB congener analysis.
The research would benefit the listed species by enhancing the
understanding of contaminant partitioning within the food web near the
Lower Duwamish Waterway Superfund Site. The USACE proposes to capture
fish using beach seines. All listed fish are released would be
captured, handled, and released. The researchers do not propose to kill
any listed fish being captured, but a small number may die as an
unintended result of the activities.
Permit 20659
The FWS is seeking a five-year research permit to annually take
juvenile PS Chinook salmon and PS steelhead from Lake Washington and
its tributaries (King County, Washington state). The purposes of the
FWS study are (1) to test how attracted Chinook salmon are to different
types of artificial lighting, and (2) to examine juvenile Chinook
salmon abundance and diets at the mouths of two non-natal tributaries
in the City of Seattle. The research would benefit the listed species
by (1) providing better information to land resource managers on how
best to reduce the effects of nighttime artificial lighting on juvenile
Chinook salmon while maintaining appropriate lighting for safety
considerations and (2) understanding how juvenile Chinook salmon use
urban streams during base flow conditions and after rain events. The
FWS proposes to capture fish using beach seines. All PS steelhead and
the majority of the PS Chinook salmon would be immediately released
after capture. A subset of the juvenile PS Chinook would be
anesthetized with MS-222, measured for length, undergo gastric lavage
(non-natal stream surveys only), and released after they have
recovered. The researchers do not propose to kill any listed fish 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: October 31, 2016.
Angela Somma,
Chief, Endangered Species Division, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2016-26530 Filed 11-2-16; 8:45 am]
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