Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Final Recovery Plan for the Laurel Dace, 79515-79516 [2016-27272]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Notices
062015.pdf.) The June 15, 2015 notice
itself was an update of prior RAD
program notices issued on July 26, 2012,
July 2, 2013, and February 6, 2014. The
June 15, 2015 notice covered both of the
RAD program’s two components.
(Component 1 applies only to public
housing units that may convert to RAD.
Component 2 applies to Section 8
Moderate Rehabilitation, Rent
Supplement, and Rental Assistance
Payment properties that may convert to
RAD.) The June 15, 2015 notice
addressed fair housing, civil rights, and
relocation requirements among the other
program instructions. However, given
the importance of these requirements,
especially as they apply to the types of
transactions common in public housing
conversions, HUD determined that a
notice dedicated solely to fair housing,
civil rights, and relocation requirements
was appropriate.
Today’s relocation notice only
addresses RAD Component 1. The
notice explains the situations in which
HUD is requiring front-end fair housing
and civil rights reviews, and provides
information regarding the types of
information that must be submitted to
facilitate HUD’s review of certain fair
housing and civil rights requirements in
connection with public housing
conversions under RAD Component 1.
The notice also includes guidance
regarding relocation requirements under
RAD and reiterates key civil rights- and
relocation-related statutory and
regulatory requirements.
II. Solicitation of Comment
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with NOTICES
As noted in the Summary of this
notice, today’s notice is posted and
effective but HUD welcomes comments
on the notice. The purpose of the notice
is to provide greater guidance on
compliance with fair housing, civil
rights, and relocation requirements.
HUD specifically solicits comment on
the clarity of the information provided
in the notice. In the event HUD makes
any changes in response to public
comment, HUD will revise the notice
and advise the public of any changes
made.
Dated: November 8, 2016.
Edward L. Golding,
Principal Deputy Assistant, Secretary for
Housing.
[FR Doc. 2016–27348 Filed 11–10–16; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R4–ES–2016–N124;
FXES1130400000C2–167–FF04E00000]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; Final Recovery Plan for the
Laurel Dace
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
We, the Fish and Wildlife
Service (Service), announce the
availability of the final recovery plan for
the endangered laurel dace, a small fish
native to the Tennessee River Basin in
Tennessee. The recovery plan includes
specific recovery objectives and criteria
that must be met in order for us to
downlist the fish to threatened status or
delist it under the Endangered Species
Act of 1973, as amended.
ADDRESSES: You may obtain a copy of
the recovery plan from our Web site at
https://www.fws.gov/endangered/
species/recovery-plans.html or the
Tennessee Field Office Web site at
https://www.fws.gov/cookeville. You may
also request a copy of the recovery plan
by contacting Geoff Call, by U.S. mail at
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Tennessee Field Office, 446 Neal Street,
Cookeville, TN 38501 (telephone 931–
525–4983).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Geoff Call (see ADDRESSES).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Background
Recovery Plans Under the Endangered
Species Act
Recovery of endangered or threatened
animals and plants to the point where
they are again secure, self-sustaining
members of their ecosystems is a
primary goal of our endangered species
program and the Endangered Species
Act of 1973, as amended (Act; 16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq.). Recovery means
improvement of the status of listed
species to the point at which listing is
no longer needed under any criteria
specified in section 4(a)(1) of the Act.
To help guide the recovery effort, we
prepare recovery plans for most listed
species. Recovery plans describe actions
considered necessary for conservation of
the species, establish criteria for
downlisting or delisting, and estimate
time and cost for implementing recovery
measures. The Act requires the
development of recovery plans for listed
species, unless such a plan would not
promote the conservation of a particular
species.
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79515
About the Species
We listed the laurel dace (Chrosomus
saylori) as an endangered species under
the Act on August 9, 2011 (76 FR
48722), and designated critical habitat
for the species on October 16, 2012 (77
FR 63604). The laurel dace is a small
fish native to the Tennessee River Basin
in Tennessee. This fish, from the family
Cyprinidae, is found or collected from
pools or slow runs from undercut banks
or under slab boulders in headwater
tributaries. The vegetation surrounding
the first or second order streams where
laurel dace occur includes mountain
laurel, rhododendron, and hemlocks.
Historically, laurel dace is known
from seven streams, and it currently
occupies six of these, in three creek
systems on the Walden Ridge of the
Cumberland Plateau. Only a few
individuals have been collected from
headwaters of the two creek systems in
the southern part of their range, Soddy
and Sale Creeks, although laurel dace
are more abundant in headwaters of the
Piney River system in their northern
range. Threats to the laurel dace include
land use activities that affect silt levels,
temperature, or hydrologic processes of
these small tributaries; invasive species,
including sunfishes, basses, and
hemlock woolly adelgid; the species’
naturally small population size and
geographic range; and climate change.
Recovery Plan Development
Section 4(f) of the Act requires us to
provide public notice and an
opportunity for public review and
comment prior to final approval of
recovery plans. We and other Federal
agencies will take these public
comments into account in the course of
implementing approved recovery plans.
The Technical/Agency Draft Recovery
Plan for the Laurel Dace was developed
by the Tennessee Field Office. This draft
plan was published on January 14, 2015,
and made available for public comment
through March 16, 2015 (79 FR 1933).
We received no comments from the
general public on the draft plan.
The Service also asked four peer
reviewers to review and provide
comments on the draft plan. We
received comments from all four peer
reviewers: Dr. J. Brian Alford of
University of Tennessee, Dr. Hayden T.
Mattingly of Tennessee Tech University,
Dr. Christopher E. Skelton of Georgia
College and State University, and Mr.
Mark Thurman of the Tennessee
Wildlife Resources Agency. All of the
peer reviewers offered general support
and praise for the draft plan. For a
summary of our responses to peer
review comments, see Appendix A in
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79516
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 219 / Monday, November 14, 2016 / Notices
the final recovery plan. We considered
the information we received from peer
reviewers in our preparation and
approval of this final recovery plan.
Specifically, we made a slight
modification to recovery criteria (see
below) by adding the clarification of 500
individuals in the definition of a viable
population. We also adjusted budgets of
recovery actions in the implementation
schedule.
Recovery Plan Components
Objectives for Reclassification to
Threatened and Delisting
The goal of this recovery plan is to
conserve populations of laurel dace and
enable the species to recover to the
point that listing under the Act is no
longer necessary. Because recovery and
delisting will take a long time to
achieve, and may be unachievable, an
intermediate goal of this recovery plan
is to reduce threats to the point that the
species could be reclassified from
endangered to threatened.
Reclassification to Threatened
Reclassification of the laurel dace to
threatened status will be possible when
habitat conditions in occupied streams
are suitable for the conservation of the
species, and viable populations are
present throughout suitable habitat in
five of the six currently occupied
streams.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with NOTICES
Delisting
In order for the laurel dace to recover
to the point that listing under the Act is
no longer necessary, it will be necessary
to conserve all existing populations by
maintaining, and in some cases
restoring, suitable habitat conditions in
all streams where the species currently
occurs. It will also be necessary to
discover or establish one additional
population.
Criteria for Reclassification From
Endangered to Threatened or Delisting
The following criteria will be used to
determine whether the objectives for
reclassification and delisting described
above have been met. The criteria will
be achieved by reducing or removing
threats to the species’ habitat and
conserving or establishing viable
populations throughout the species’
range, as determined by monitoring of
demographic and genetic parameters.
Criteria for Reclassification From
Endangered to Threatened
Criterion 1: Suitable instream habitat,
flows, and water quality for laurel dace,
as defined by Recovery Tasks in the
recovery plan, exist in occupied
streams.
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Criterion 2: Viable populations * are
present throughout suitable habitat in
Bumbee, Moccasin, and Youngs Creeks,
and at least two of the following
streams: Soddy Creek, Cupp Creek or
Horn Branch.
Criteria for Delisting
Criterion 1: Suitable instream habitat,
flows, and water quality for laurel dace
exist in all occupied streams, and
mechanisms exist to ensure that land
use activities (including road
maintenance) in catchments of streams
inhabited by laurel dace will be
compatible with the species’
conservation for the foreseeable future.
Such mechanisms could include, but
are not necessarily limited to,
conservation agreements, conservation
easements, land acquisition, and habitat
conservation plans.
Criterion 2: Viable populations * are
present throughout suitable habitat in
Bumbee, Moccasin, Youngs, Soddy, and
Cupp Creeks and Horn Branch, and one
additional viable population, created
either through reintroduction into
Laurel Branch or by discovery of an
additional wild population.
* Populations will be considered
viable when the following demographic
and genetic conditions exist:
• Demographics—Monitoring data
demonstrate that (a) populations are
stable or increasing, (b) average census
size is at least 500 individuals and two
or more age-classes are consistently
present over a period of time
encompassing five generations (i.e., 15
years), and (c) evidence of recruitment
is not absent in more than 3 years or
during consecutive years at any point
within that period of time.
• Genetics—Populations will be
considered to have sufficient genetic
variation to be viable if measurements of
observed number of alleles and
estimates of heterozygosity and effective
population size have remained stable or
increased during the five generations
used to establish demographic viability.
Authority
The authority for this action is section
4(f) of the Endangered Species Act, 16
U.S.C. 1533(f).
Dated: August 22, 2016.
Mike Oetker,
Acting Regional Director, Southeast Region.
[FR Doc. 2016–27272 Filed 11–10–16; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R6–R–2016–N040; FF06R06000–
FXRS12610600000–167]
National Elk Refuge, Teton County,
Wyoming; Final Comprehensive
Conservation Plan and Finding of No
Significant Impact for Environmental
Assessment
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability of a final comprehensive
conservation plan (CCP) and finding of
no significant impact (FONSI) for the
environmental assessment (EA) for the
National Elk Refuge (Refuge, NWR). In
this final CCP, we describe how we
intend to manage the refuge for the next
15 years.
ADDRESSES: You will find the final CCP,
a summary of the final CCP, and the EA/
FONSI on the planning Web site: https://
www.fws.gov/mountain-prairie/refuges/
wy_ner.php. A limited number of hard
copies and CD–ROMs are available. You
may request one by any of the following
methods:
• Email: nationalelkrefuge@fws.gov.
Include ‘‘National Elk Refuge CCP’’ in
the subject line of the message.
• U.S. Mail: National Elk Refuge, P.O.
Box 510, Jackson, WY, 83001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Steve Kallin, Refuge Manager, at 307–
733–9212 (phone), or Toni Griffin,
Planning Team Leader, 303–236–4378
(phone) or toni_griffin@fws.gov (email).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Introduction
With this notice, we continue the CCP
process for the National Elk Refuge,
which we began by publishing a notice
of intent in the Federal Register (75 FR
65370) on October 22, 2010. For more
about the initial process and the history
of this refuge, see that notice. We
released the draft CCP and EA to the
public, announcing and requesting
comments in a notice of availability (79
FR 53440) on September 9, 2014. The
45-day comment period ended on
October 24, 2014. A summary of public
comments and the agency responses is
included in the final CCP.
Background
The National Wildlife Refuge System
Administration Act of 1966, as amended
by the National Wildlife Refuge System
Improvement Act of 1997 (16 U.S.C.
668dd–668ee) (Administration Act),
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 219 (Monday, November 14, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 79515-79516]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-27272]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS-R4-ES-2016-N124; FXES1130400000C2-167-FF04E00000]
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Final Recovery
Plan for the Laurel Dace
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability of the final recovery plan for the endangered laurel dace,
a small fish native to the Tennessee River Basin in Tennessee. The
recovery plan includes specific recovery objectives and criteria that
must be met in order for us to downlist the fish to threatened status
or delist it under the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended.
ADDRESSES: You may obtain a copy of the recovery plan from our Web site
at https://www.fws.gov/endangered/species/recovery-plans.html or the
Tennessee Field Office Web site at https://www.fws.gov/cookeville. You
may also request a copy of the recovery plan by contacting Geoff Call,
by U.S. mail at U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Tennessee Field Office,
446 Neal Street, Cookeville, TN 38501 (telephone 931-525-4983).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Geoff Call (see ADDRESSES).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Recovery Plans Under the Endangered Species Act
Recovery of endangered or threatened animals and plants to the
point where they are again secure, self-sustaining members of their
ecosystems is a primary goal of our endangered species program and the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act; 16 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.). Recovery means improvement of the status of listed species to
the point at which listing is no longer needed under any criteria
specified in section 4(a)(1) of the Act. To help guide the recovery
effort, we prepare recovery plans for most listed species. Recovery
plans describe actions considered necessary for conservation of the
species, establish criteria for downlisting or delisting, and estimate
time and cost for implementing recovery measures. The Act requires the
development of recovery plans for listed species, unless such a plan
would not promote the conservation of a particular species.
About the Species
We listed the laurel dace (Chrosomus saylori) as an endangered
species under the Act on August 9, 2011 (76 FR 48722), and designated
critical habitat for the species on October 16, 2012 (77 FR 63604). The
laurel dace is a small fish native to the Tennessee River Basin in
Tennessee. This fish, from the family Cyprinidae, is found or collected
from pools or slow runs from undercut banks or under slab boulders in
headwater tributaries. The vegetation surrounding the first or second
order streams where laurel dace occur includes mountain laurel,
rhododendron, and hemlocks.
Historically, laurel dace is known from seven streams, and it
currently occupies six of these, in three creek systems on the Walden
Ridge of the Cumberland Plateau. Only a few individuals have been
collected from headwaters of the two creek systems in the southern part
of their range, Soddy and Sale Creeks, although laurel dace are more
abundant in headwaters of the Piney River system in their northern
range. Threats to the laurel dace include land use activities that
affect silt levels, temperature, or hydrologic processes of these small
tributaries; invasive species, including sunfishes, basses, and hemlock
woolly adelgid; the species' naturally small population size and
geographic range; and climate change.
Recovery Plan Development
Section 4(f) of the Act requires us to provide public notice and an
opportunity for public review and comment prior to final approval of
recovery plans. We and other Federal agencies will take these public
comments into account in the course of implementing approved recovery
plans.
The Technical/Agency Draft Recovery Plan for the Laurel Dace was
developed by the Tennessee Field Office. This draft plan was published
on January 14, 2015, and made available for public comment through
March 16, 2015 (79 FR 1933). We received no comments from the general
public on the draft plan.
The Service also asked four peer reviewers to review and provide
comments on the draft plan. We received comments from all four peer
reviewers: Dr. J. Brian Alford of University of Tennessee, Dr. Hayden
T. Mattingly of Tennessee Tech University, Dr. Christopher E. Skelton
of Georgia College and State University, and Mr. Mark Thurman of the
Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency. All of the peer reviewers offered
general support and praise for the draft plan. For a summary of our
responses to peer review comments, see Appendix A in
[[Page 79516]]
the final recovery plan. We considered the information we received from
peer reviewers in our preparation and approval of this final recovery
plan. Specifically, we made a slight modification to recovery criteria
(see below) by adding the clarification of 500 individuals in the
definition of a viable population. We also adjusted budgets of recovery
actions in the implementation schedule.
Recovery Plan Components
Objectives for Reclassification to Threatened and Delisting
The goal of this recovery plan is to conserve populations of laurel
dace and enable the species to recover to the point that listing under
the Act is no longer necessary. Because recovery and delisting will
take a long time to achieve, and may be unachievable, an intermediate
goal of this recovery plan is to reduce threats to the point that the
species could be reclassified from endangered to threatened.
Reclassification to Threatened
Reclassification of the laurel dace to threatened status will be
possible when habitat conditions in occupied streams are suitable for
the conservation of the species, and viable populations are present
throughout suitable habitat in five of the six currently occupied
streams.
Delisting
In order for the laurel dace to recover to the point that listing
under the Act is no longer necessary, it will be necessary to conserve
all existing populations by maintaining, and in some cases restoring,
suitable habitat conditions in all streams where the species currently
occurs. It will also be necessary to discover or establish one
additional population.
Criteria for Reclassification From Endangered to Threatened or
Delisting
The following criteria will be used to determine whether the
objectives for reclassification and delisting described above have been
met. The criteria will be achieved by reducing or removing threats to
the species' habitat and conserving or establishing viable populations
throughout the species' range, as determined by monitoring of
demographic and genetic parameters.
Criteria for Reclassification From Endangered to Threatened
Criterion 1: Suitable instream habitat, flows, and water quality
for laurel dace, as defined by Recovery Tasks in the recovery plan,
exist in occupied streams.
Criterion 2: Viable populations * are present throughout suitable
habitat in Bumbee, Moccasin, and Youngs Creeks, and at least two of the
following streams: Soddy Creek, Cupp Creek or Horn Branch.
Criteria for Delisting
Criterion 1: Suitable instream habitat, flows, and water quality
for laurel dace exist in all occupied streams, and mechanisms exist to
ensure that land use activities (including road maintenance) in
catchments of streams inhabited by laurel dace will be compatible with
the species' conservation for the foreseeable future. Such mechanisms
could include, but are not necessarily limited to, conservation
agreements, conservation easements, land acquisition, and habitat
conservation plans.
Criterion 2: Viable populations * are present throughout suitable
habitat in Bumbee, Moccasin, Youngs, Soddy, and Cupp Creeks and Horn
Branch, and one additional viable population, created either through
reintroduction into Laurel Branch or by discovery of an additional wild
population.
* Populations will be considered viable when the following
demographic and genetic conditions exist:
Demographics--Monitoring data demonstrate that (a)
populations are stable or increasing, (b) average census size is at
least 500 individuals and two or more age-classes are consistently
present over a period of time encompassing five generations (i.e., 15
years), and (c) evidence of recruitment is not absent in more than 3
years or during consecutive years at any point within that period of
time.
Genetics--Populations will be considered to have
sufficient genetic variation to be viable if measurements of observed
number of alleles and estimates of heterozygosity and effective
population size have remained stable or increased during the five
generations used to establish demographic viability.
Authority
The authority for this action is section 4(f) of the Endangered
Species Act, 16 U.S.C. 1533(f).
Dated: August 22, 2016.
Mike Oetker,
Acting Regional Director, Southeast Region.
[FR Doc. 2016-27272 Filed 11-10-16; 8:45 am]
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