Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to the Mission Bay Ferry and Water Taxi Landing Project in San Francisco Bay, California, 42465-42490 [2018-18056]
Download as PDF
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
• Beauty Bay Washington, LLC, Seattle,
WA changes to Beauty Bay
Washington, LLC, Edmonds, WA
• Blue North Fisheries, Inc, Seattle, WA
changes to Blue North Fisheries, Inc.,
Seattle, WA
• Clipper Group, Ltd, Seattle, WA
changes to Clipper Group, Ltd.,
Seattle, WA
• Liberator Fisheries, LLC, Seattle, WA
changes to Liberator Fisheries LLC,
Seattle, WA
• Siberian Sea Fisheries, LLC, Seattle,
WA changes to Siberian Sea Fisheries
LLC, Seattle, WA
Alaska Longline Cod Commission’s
proposed amendment of its Export
Trade Certificate of Review would result
in the following Membership list:
1. Akulurak LLC, Seattle, WA;
2. Alaskan Leader Fisheries LLC,
Lynden, WA;
3. Alaskan Leader Seafoods LLC,
Lynden, WA;
4. Alaskan Leader Vessel LLC, Lynden,
WA;
5. Aleutian Spray Fisheries, Inc.,
Seattle, WA;
6. Beauty Bay Washington, LLC,
Edmonds, WA;
7. Bering Leader Fisheries LLC, Lynden,
WA;
8. Blue North Fisheries, Inc., Seattle,
WA;
9. Blue North Trading Company, LLC,
Seattle, WA;
10. Bristol Leader Fisheries LLC,
Lynden, WA;
11. Clipper Group, Ltd., Seattle, WA;
12. Clipper Seafoods, Ltd., Seattle, WA;
13. Coastal Villages Longline LLC,
Anchorage, AK;
14. Deep Sea Fisheries, Inc., Everett,
WA;
15. Gulf Mist, Inc., Everett, WA;
16. Liberator Fisheries LLC, Seattle,
WA;
17. Northern Leader Fisheries LLC,
Lynden, WA;
18. Prowler Fisheries, LLC, Seattle, WA;
19. Romanzof Fishing Company, L.L.C.,
Seattle, WA;
20. Shelford’s Boat, Ltd., Mill Creek,
WA;
21. Siberian Sea Fisheries LLC, Seattle,
WA;
22. Siu Alaska Corporation, Anchorage,
AK;
23. Tatoosh Seafoods, LLC, Edmonds,
WA.
Dated: August 16, 2018.
Joseph Flynn,
Director, Office of Trade and Economic
Analysis, International Trade Administration.
[FR Doc. 2018–18051 Filed 8–21–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DR–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XG105
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to
Specified Activities; Taking Marine
Mammals Incidental to the Mission Bay
Ferry and Water Taxi Landing Project
in San Francisco Bay, California
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental
harassment authorization; request for
comments on proposed authorization
and possible renewal.
AGENCY:
NMFS has received a request
from the Port of San Francisco for
authorization to take marine mammals
incidental to the Mission Bay Ferry and
Water Taxi Landing Project in San
Francisco Bay, California. Pursuant to
the Marine Mammal Protection Act
(MMPA), NMFS is requesting comments
on its proposal to issue an incidental
harassment authorization (IHA) to
incidentally take marine mammals
during the specified activities. NMFS is
also requesting comments on a possible
one-year renewal that could be issued
under certain circumstances and if all
requirements are met, as described in
Request for Public Comments at the end
of this notice. NMFS will consider
public comments prior to making any
final decision on the issuance of the
requested MMPA authorization and
agency responses will be summarized in
the final notice of our decision.
DATES: Comments and information must
be received no later than September 21,
2018.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
addressed to Jolie Harrison, Chief,
Permits and Conservation Division,
Office of Protected Resources, National
Marine Fisheries Service. Physical
comments should be sent to 1315 EastWest Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910
and electronic comments should be sent
to ITP.redding@noaa.gov.
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible
for comments sent by any other method,
to any other address or individual, or
received after the end of the comment
period. Comments received
electronically, including all
attachments, must not exceed a 25megabyte file size. Attachments to
electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word or Excel or Adobe PDF
file formats only. All comments
received are a part of the public record
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42465
and will generally be posted online at
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/node/
23111 without change. All personal
identifying information (e.g., name,
address) voluntarily submitted by the
commenter may be publicly accessible.
Do not submit confidential business
information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information.
Gray
Redding, Office of Protected Resources,
NMFS, (301) 427–8401. Electronic
copies of the application and supporting
documents, as well as a list of the
references cited in this document, may
be obtained online at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/incidentaltake-authorizations-constructionactivities. In case of problems accessing
these documents, please call the contact
listed above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The MMPA prohibits the ‘‘take’’ of
marine mammals, with certain
exceptions. Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and
(D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et
seq.) direct the Secretary of Commerce
(as delegated to NMFS) to allow, upon
request, the incidental, but not
intentional, taking of small numbers of
marine mammals by U.S. citizens who
engage in a specified activity (other than
commercial fishing) within a specified
geographical region if certain findings
are made and either regulations are
issued or, if the taking is limited to
harassment, a notice of a proposed
incidental take authorization may be
provided to the public for review.
Authorization for incidental takings
shall be granted if NMFS finds that the
taking will have a negligible impact on
the species or stock(s) and will not have
an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for
taking for subsistence uses (where
relevant). Further, NMFS must prescribe
the permissible methods of taking and
other ‘‘means of effecting the least
practicable [adverse] impact’’ on the
affected species or stocks and their
habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of
similar significance, and on the
availability of such species or stocks for
taking for certain subsistence uses
(referred to in shorthand as
‘‘mitigation’’); and requirements
pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring
and reporting of such takings are set
forth. The definitions of all applicable
MMPA statutory terms cited above are
included in the relevant sections below.
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
42466
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
National Environmental Policy Act
To comply with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and
NOAA Administrative Order (NAO)
216–6A, NMFS must review our
proposed action (i.e., the issuance of an
incidental harassment authorization)
with respect to potential impacts on the
human environment.
This action is consistent with
categories of activities identified in
Categorical Exclusion B4 (incidental
harassment authorizations with no
anticipated serious injury or mortality)
of the Companion Manual for NOAA
Administrative Order 216–6A, which do
not individually or cumulatively have
the potential for significant impacts on
the quality of the human environment
and for which we have not identified
any extraordinary circumstances that
would preclude this categorical
exclusion. Accordingly, NMFS has
preliminarily determined that the
issuance of the proposed IHA qualifies
to be categorically excluded from
further NEPA review.
We will review all comments
submitted in response to this notice
prior to concluding our NEPA process
or making a final decision on the IHA
request.
is neither requested nor proposed for
authorization.
The Mission Bay Ferry Landing, a
single-float, two-berth ferry landing will
provide critical regional ferry service to
and from the Mission Bay
neighborhood, one of the fastest growing
neighborhoods in San Francisco, as well
as the Dogpatch, Potrero Hill, Pier 70,
and the Central Waterfront
neighborhoods. The separate single
float, two-berth Water Taxi Landing will
provide local water taxi access to the
Mission Bay area and surrounding
neighborhoods.
Summary of Request
On November 2, 2017, NMFS received
a request from the Port of San Francisco
for an IHA to take marine mammals
incidental to pile driving and drilling in
San Francisco Bay. NMFS determined
that a revised version of the Port’s
application was adequate and complete
on June 22, 2018. The Port of San
Francisco’s request is for take of seven
species of marine mammals by Level B
harassment only. Neither the Port of San
Francisco nor NMFS expects serious
injury or mortality to result from this
activity and, therefore, an IHA is
appropriate.
Specific Geographic Region
Description of Proposed Activity
Demolition
Overview
The port of San Francisco proposes to
construct the Mission Bay Ferry
Landing (MBFL) and Water Taxi
Landing (WTL) on San Francisco Bay,
within the Port of San Francisco’s
Southern Waterfront in the Mission
Bay/Central Waterfront area (see Figure
1 of IHA Application). The project’s
proposed activities that have the
potential to take marine mammals
include vibratory and impact pile
driving, vibratory pile removal, and
down the hole drilling. In addition, the
project will include dredging, however
authorization of take from this activity
Based on preliminary bathymetric
surveys and historic information, The
Port anticipates that buried remnants of
concrete and wood debris from Pier 64–
66 apron may be encountered within the
Ferry Landing dredge boundary. All
debris encountered during dredging
operations will be removed and
disposed of at an approved upland
location.
In addition, existing piles will be
pulled with a cable choker or removed
with a vibratory hammer and every
effort will be made to remove the entire
pile length. If it is necessary to utilize
vibratory hammer to remove a pile the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
Dates and Duration
The Port of San Francisco’s
construction, including dredging,
vibratory and impact pile driving, and
drilling for installation of the pier and
floating docks will occur from June
through November of 2019
(environment working windows for
dredging in this region of the San
Francisco Bay established by the San
Francisco Bay Long Term Management
Strategy (LTMS Agencies, 2001). The
maximum number of construction days
possible, including dredging and all
other activities, is 55 days. The
maximum total number of days for pile
installation and removal are 15 days.
As stated, the project is located in San
Francisco Bay within the Port of San
Francisco’s Southern Waterfront in the
Mission Bay/Central Waterfront area.
The specific geographic location for the
project is provided in Figures 1 and 2
of the IHA Application. The project site
is approximately three kilometers south
of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay
Bridge, on the western side of San
Francisco Bay in the Central Basin. The
nearby waterfront is an active
recreational and commercial port and
shipyard.
Detailed Description of Specific Activity
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
process will consist of approximately 1–
2 minutes of initial vibratory use while
pulling the pile up to loosen it from the
sediment. The barge/crane then moves
to the next pile to loosen. The operator
will do this for five to eight piles then
remove the vibratory driver and go back
to dead pull the loosened piles and
place them on a debris barge for
disposal at a permitted facility. The
vibratory use is minimal to just loosen
the pile. Noise generated from the
operation of the vibratory hammer is
expected to result in the behavioral
disturbance of marine mammals and,
therefore, take authorization is
requested, and accounted for in the
‘‘Take Calculation and Estimation’’
section below.
Dredging
Dredging of approximately 129,374
cubic yards will be conducted to a
depth of ¥15 feet (ft) MLLW +2 ft of
overdepth within the Ferry Landing
dredge boundary, and to a depth of ¥8ft
MLLW +1 ft overdepth within the Water
Taxi Landing dredge boundary.
Best Management Practices (BMPs)
will be detailed in a Dredge Operations
Plan (DOP) submitted to the regulatory
agencies for approval before dredging
begins, and implemented. Dredging will
be performed from a barge-mounted
crane with a clam shell bucket.
Sediment will be transferred into
adjacent barges for transport to
permitted placement site(s). All debris
encountered during dredging operations
will be removed and disposed of at an
approved upland location. Noise
measurements of dredging activities are
rare in the literature, but dredging is
considered to be a low-impact activity
for marine mammals, producing nonpulsed sound and being substantially
quieter in terms of acoustic energy
output than sources such as seismic
airguns and impact pile driving. Noise
produced by dredging operations has
been compared to that produced by a
commercial vessel travelling at modest
speed (Robinson et al., 2011). Further
discussion of dredging sound
production may be found in the
literature (e.g., Richardson et al., 1995,
Nedwell et al., 2008, Parvin et al., 2008,
Ainslie et al., 2009). Generally, the
effects of dredging on marine mammals
are not expected to rise to the level of
a take. As stated, take is highly unlikely
and is not proposed to be authorized for
dredging activities.
Pile Installation
A total of 28 permanent piles will be
installed as part of this project. Four 24inch concrete piles will be installed on
land above the mean highwater (MHW)
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42467
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
line, and the remaining piles will all be
installed in-water as outlined in Table 1.
Concrete piles used for in-water
construction of the pier structure for the
Mission Bay Ferry Landing will involve
the temporary installation of a steel
caisson sleeve followed by drilling of
the rock socket, with this installation
and drilling process outlined below.
Four 14-inch steel H piles will be driven
with a vibratory driver to provide
support for a 30-inch steel caisson
sleeve, a large tubular steel pile. The
steel sleeve will also be installed using
a vibratory driver until refusal. Once the
caisson is in place, sediment/soil/rock
within the caisson will be drilled out
using a Bauer BG18 drill or similar. All
drilled sediment/soil/rock will be
collected for disposal and transported to
an appropriate permitted facility. The
concrete piles are then inserted after the
hole has been drilled. The 24-inch
concrete piles will then be placed/
seated in bedrock for grouting then the
outer caisson and four H-piles will be
pulled. Figure 3 in the IHA Application
provides a depiction of this process.
This method of construction creates less
overall noise and turbidity during
installation than driven piles. Drilling
also is beneficial as it reduces the stress
and therefore chance of breakage or
damage to the pile during installation.
Overall, ten 24-inch octagonal concrete
piles will be driven using these
methods, including down the hole
drilling. Authorization of take by Level
B harassment was requested and is
proposed for authorization by NMFS for
drilling activities associated with 24inch concrete piles.
For the remaining piles, noise
generated by vibratory and/or impact
hammers is expected to result in the
disturbance of marine mammals and,
therefore, authorization of incidental
take is proposed. Eight 36-inch steel
piles for the MBFL guide piles and
donut fenders and two 16-inch steel
piles for the WTL platform will be
installed with a combination of
vibratory driver and/or impact hammer.
The four remaining 20-inch square
concrete piles to be installed in-water
will be installed with an impact
hammer.
The Port estimates a production rate
for pile driving of two to six piles per
day, resulting in a 15 days of pile
driving and removal as outlined in
Table 1. Piles installed using an impact
hammer will use a Delmag D36/D46/
D62 or similar diesel hammer. An
overview of the sound source levels for
this pile installation can be found in
Table 3. It should be noted that the
contractor will be instructed to
implement vibratory installation as
much as possible.
All pile driving will be performed in
compliance with the ‘‘U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers Proposed Procedures for
Permitting Projects that will Not
Adversely Affect Selected Listed
Species in California’’ and the
associated USFWS and NMFS section 7
consultation documents associated with
these procedures.
TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF IN WATER PILE INSTALLATION
Project
element
Locations
Number
of piles
Pile type
Method
Piles/day
Construction
days
Debris Removal ................
12
Steel .............
12
If necessary, a vibratory hammer will be used
to remove up to 12 piles 60–120 seconds/pile
while pulling the pile up to loosen it from the
sediment.
12
MBFL .....
Pier ...............
14
30
24
H-pile steel ...
Steel caisson
Octagonal
concrete.
4
1
10
4
1
1
10
Float Guide
Piles.
36
Steel .............
6
5
2
Donut Fender
Piles.
36
Steel .............
2
5
....................
Platform ........
16
Steel .............
2
2
1
Guide Piles ..
20
Square Concrete.
4
Four 14-inch steel H beams will be driven with
Vibratory Driver 600 seconds/pile to support
30-inch steel caisson sleeve driven with Vibratory Driver (900 sec/pile) to refusal, drill
out hole removing soils, place and position
concrete pile, grout pile in place while simultaneously pulling the caisson.
Vibratory Driver 1200 sec/pile then Impact
Hammer last 15 ft (150 strikes/pile ∼20 minutes); bubble curtain will be used during impact duration.
Vibratory Driver 1200 sec/pile then Impact
Hammer last 15 ft (150 strikes/pile ∼20 minutes); bubble curtain will be used during impact duration.
Vibratory Driver 600 sec/pile then Impact Hammer last 15 ft (500 strikes/pile ∼20 minutes);
bubble curtain will be used during impact duration.
Impact Hammer 500 strikes/pile (max 20 minutes); if necessary bubble curtain will be used
during impact duration.
4
1
WTL .......
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Pile
diameter
(inch)
Installation of Ferry Landing Structural
Elements
Installation of the pier deck, pier
canopy, float, and gangway would be
conducted from land and water-based
vessels. This work would include the
use of generators, cranes, and other
heavy equipment but is not expected to
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
result in any harassment of marine
mammals. Therefore, no take is
requested or proposed for authorization
for these activities.
Proposed mitigation, monitoring, and
reporting measures are described in
detail later in this document (please see
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Proposed Mitigation and Proposed
Monitoring and Reporting).
Description of Marine Mammals in the
Area of Specified Activities
Sections 3 and 4 of the application
summarize available information
regarding status and trends, distribution
and habitat preferences, and behavior
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42468
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
and life history, of the potentially
affected species. Additional information
regarding population trends and threats
may be found in NMFS’s Stock
Assessment Reports (SAR; https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/marinemammal-stock-assessments) and more
general information about these species
(e.g., physical and behavioral
descriptions) may be found on NMFS’s
website (https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/find-species).
Table 2 lists all species with expected
potential for occurrence in the Mission
Bay/Central Waterfront area of San
Francisco Bay and summarizes
information related to the population or
Common name
stock, including regulatory status under
the MMPA and ESA and potential
biological removal (PBR), where known.
For taxonomy, we follow the Committee
on Taxonomy (2017). PBR is defined by
the MMPA as the maximum number of
animals, not including natural
mortalities, that may be removed from a
marine mammal stock while allowing
that stock to reach or maintain its
optimum sustainable population (as
described in NMFS’s SARs). While
NMFS neither anticipates nor proposes
to authorize mortality here, PBR and
annual serious injury and mortality
from anthropogenic sources are
included here as gross indicators of the
status of the species and other threats.
Scientific name
Marine mammal abundance estimates
presented in this document represent
the total number of individuals that
make up a given stock or the total
number estimated within a particular
study or survey area. NMFS’s stock
abundance estimates for most species
represent the total estimate of
individuals within the geographic area,
if known, that comprises that stock. For
some species, this geographic area may
extend beyond U.S. waters. All managed
stocks in this region are assessed in
NMFS’s U.S. 2017 SARs (Carretta et al.,
2017). All values presented in Table 2
are the most recent available at the time
of publication and are available in the
2017 SARs (Carretta et al., 2017).
Stock
abundance
(CV, Nmin,
most recent
abundance
survey) 2
ESA/
MMPA
status;
strategic
(Y/N) 1
Stock
Annual
M/SI 3
PBR
Order Cetartiodactyla—Cetacea—Superfamily Mysticeti (baleen whales)
Family Eschrichtiidae
Gray whale .................................
Eschrichtius robustus ................
Eastern North Pacific ................
-/-; N
20,990 (0.05, 20,125,
2011).
E/D; Y
1,918 (0.03, 1,876, 2014)
624
132
11
>6.5
Family Balaenopteridae (rorquals)
Humpback whale .......................
Megaptera novaeangliae ..........
California/Oregon/Washington ..
Superfamily Odontoceti (toothed whales, dolphins, and porpoises)
Family Delphinidae
Bottlenose dolphin .....................
Tursiops truncatus ....................
California Coastal .....................
-/-; N
453 (0.06, 346, 2011) .....
2.7
>2
-/-; N
9,886 (0.51, 6,625, 2011)
66
0
296,750 (n/a, 153,337,
2011).
14,050 (n/a, 7,524, 2013)
626,734 (n/a, 530,474,
2014).
20,000 (n/a, 15,830,
2010).
9,200
389
451
11,405
1.8
1.1
542
>3.2
1,641
43
4,882
8.8
Family Phocoenidae (porpoises)
Harbor porpoise .........................
Phocoena phocoena .................
San Francisco-Russian River ...
Order Carnivora—Superfamily Pinnipedia
Family Otariidae (eared seals and sea lions)
California sea lion ......................
Zalophus californianus ..............
U.S. ...........................................
-/-; N
Northern fur seal ........................
Callorhinus ursinus ...................
California ...................................
Eastern North Pacific ................
-/-; N
-/-; N
Guadalupe fur seal ....................
Arctocephalus townsendi ..........
Mexico to California ..................
T/D; Y
Pacific harbor seal .....................
Phoca vitulina richardii ..............
California ...................................
-/-; N
Northern elephant seal ..............
Mirounga angustirostris ............
California Breeding ...................
-/-; N
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Family Phocidae (earless seals)
30,968 (n/a, 27,348,
2012).
179,000 (n/a, 81,368,
2010).
1 Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (-) indicates that the species is not listed under the
ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality exceeds PBR or
which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed under the ESA is automatically
designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
2 NMFS marine mammal stock assessment reports online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments. CV is coefficient of variation; Nmin is the minimum estimate of stock abundance. In some cases, CV is not applicable.
3 These values, found in NMFSs SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g., commercial fisheries, ship strike). Annual M/SI often cannot be determined precisely and is in some cases presented as a minimum value or range. A CV associated with estimated
mortality due to commercial fisheries is presented in some cases.
Note: Italicized species are not expected to be taken or proposed for authorization.
All species that could potentially
occur in the Port’s proposed project area
in San Francisco Bay are included in
Table 2. However, the temporal and/or
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
spatial occurrence of humpback whale
and Guadalupe fur seal is such that take
is not expected to occur, and they are
not discussed further beyond the
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
explanation provided here. Humpback
whales are rare visitors to the interior of
San Francisco Bay. A recent, seasonal
influx of humpback whales inside San
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
Francisco Bay near the Golden Gate was
recorded from April to November in
2016 and 2017 (Keener 2017). The
Golden Gate is outside of this project’s
action area and humpback whales are
not expected to be present during the
project. Guadalupe fur seals
occasionally range into the waters of
northern California and the Pacific
Northwest. The Farallon Islands (off
central California) and Channel Islands
(off southern California) are used as
haulouts during these movements
(Simon 2016). Juvenile Guadalupe fur
seals occasionally strand in the vicinity
of San Francisco, especially during El
Nin˜o events. Most strandings along the
California coast are animals younger
than two years old, with evidence of
malnutrition (NMFS 2017a). Because
Guadalupe fur seals are highly rare in
the area, and sightings are associated
with abnormal weather conditions, such
as El Nin˜o events, NMFS has
determined that no Guadalupe fur seals
are likely to occur in the project vicinity
and, therefore, no take is expected to
occur.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Harbor Seal
Harbor seals are found from Baja
California to the eastern Aleutian
Islands of Alaska. The species primarily
hauls out on remote mainland and
island beaches and reefs, and estuary
areas. Harbor seals tend to forage locally
within 53 miles (mi) (85 kilometers
(km)) of haul-out sites (Harvey and
Goley 2011). Harbor seal is the most
common marine mammal species
observed in the Bay and individuals are
commonly seen near the San FranciscoOakland Bay Bridge east span (CalTrans
2013b, 2013c). Tagging studies have
shown that most seals tagged in the Bay
remain in the Bay (Harvey and Goley
2011; Manugian 2013). Foraging often
occurs in the Bay, as noted by
observations of seals exhibiting foraging
behavior (short dives less than five
minutes, moving back and forth in an
area, and sometimes tearing up prey at
the surface).
Gray Whale
Gray whales are large baleen whales.
They grow to approximately 50 ft in
length and weigh up to 40 tons. They
are one of the most frequently seen
whales along the California coast, easily
recognized by their mottled gray color
and lack of dorsal fin. Adult whales
carry heavy loads of attached barnacles,
which add to their mottled appearance.
Gray whales are divided into the Eastern
North Pacific and Western North Pacific
stocks. Both stocks migrate each year
along the west coast of continental
North America and Alaska. The Eastern
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
North Pacific stock is much larger and
is more likely to occur in the San
Francisco Bay area. Western North
Pacific Gray whales have summer and
fall feeding grounds in the Okhotsk Sea
off northeast Sakhalin Island, Russia,
and off southeastern Kamchatka in the
Bering Sea (NMFS 2017c), so they
would not be expected to occur in San
Francisco Bay during construction
activity for this project. With the
exception of an unusual mortality event
in 1999 and 2000, the population of
Eastern North Pacific stock has
increased over the last 20 years and has
been stable since the 1990s (NMFS
2015c).
Gray whales are the only baleen
whale known to feed on the sea floor,
where they scoop up bottom sediments
to filter out benthic crustaceans,
mollusks, and worms (NMFS 2015c).
They feed in northern waters primarily
off the Bering, Chukchi, and western
Beaufort Seas during the summer.
Between December and January, latestage pregnant females, adult males, and
immature females and males migrate
southward to breeding areas around
Mexico. The northward migration
occurs between February and March.
Coastal waters just outside San
Francisco Bay are considered a
migratory Biologically Important Area
for the northward progression of gray
whales (Calambokidis et al., 2015).
During this time, recently pregnant
females, adult males, immature females,
and females with calves move north to
the feeding grounds (Calambokidis et
al., 2014). A few individuals enter into
the San Francisco Bay during their
northward migration.
Bottlenose Dolphins
Bottlenose dolphins are distributed
world-wide in tropical and warmtemperate waters. In many regions,
including California, separate coastal
and offshore populations are known
(Walker 1981; Ross and Cockcroft 1990;
Van Waerebeek et al. 1990). The
California coastal stock of bottlenose
dolphins is distinct from the offshore
stock, based on significant differences in
genetics and cranial morphology (Perrin
et al. 2011, Lowther-Thielking et al.
2015). California coastal bottlenose
dolphins are found within about one km
of shore (Hansen, 1990; Carretta et al.
1998; Defran and Weller 1999) with the
range extending north over the last
several decades related to El Nin˜o
events and increased ocean
temperatures. As the range of bottlenose
dolphins extended north, dolphins
began entering the Bay in 2010
(Szczepaniak 2013). Until 2016, most
bottlenose dolphins in San Francisco
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42469
Bay were observed in the western Bay,
from the Golden Gate Bridge to Oyster
Point and Redwood City (Perlman
2017).
Harbor Porpoise
Harbor porpoise are seldom found in
waters warmer than 62.6 degrees
Fahrenheit (17 degrees Celsius) (Read
1990) or south of Point Conception, and
occurs as far north as the Bering Sea
(Barlow and Hanan 1995; Carretta et al.,
2017). The San Francisco-Russian River
stock is found from Pescadero, 18 mi (30
km) south of the Bay, to 99 mi (160 km)
north of the Bay at Point Arena (Carretta
et al., 2017). In most areas, harbor
porpoise occurs in small groups,
consisting of just a few individuals.
Occasional sightings of harbor
porpoises in the Bay, including near the
Yerba Buena Island harbor seal haul-out
site, were reported by the Caltrans
marine mammal monitoring program
beginning in 2008 (Caltrans 2018).
Continued sightings from Caltrans and
the Golden Gate Cetacean Research
(GGCR) Organization suggests that the
species is returning to San Francisco
Bay after an absence of approximately
65 years (GGCR 2010). This
re-immergence is not unique to San
Francisco Bay, but rather indicative of
the harbor porpoise in general along the
west coast. GGCR has been issued a
scientific research permit from NMFS
for a multi-year assessment to document
the population abundance and
distribution in the Bay (82 FR 60374).
Recent observations of harbor porpoises
have been reported by GGCR researchers
off Cavallo Point, outside Raccoon Strait
between Tiburon and Angel Island, off
Fort Point and as far into the Bay as
Carquinez Strait (Perlman 2010). Based
on the Caltrans and GGCR monitoring,
over 100 porpoises were seen at one
time entering San Francisco Bay; and
over 600 individual animals have been
documented in a photo-ID database.
Reported sightings are concentrated in
the vicinity of the Golden Gate Bridge
and Angel Island, with lesser numbers
sighted south of Alcatraz and west of
Treasure Island (AECOM 2017).
California Sea Lion
California sea lions breed on the
offshore islands of California from May
through July (Heath and Perrin 2009).
During the non-breeding season, adult
and sub-adult males and juveniles
migrate northward along the coast, to
central and northern California, Oregon,
Washington, and Vancouver Island
(Jefferson et al., 1993). They return
south the following spring (Lowry and
Forney 2005; Heath and Perrin 2009).
Females and some juveniles tend to
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42470
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
remain closer to rookeries (Antonelis et
al., 1990; Melin et al., 2008).
In San Francisco Bay, California sea
lions have been observed at Angel
Island and occupying the docks near
Pier 39 which is the largest California
sea lion haul-out in San Francisco Bay.
A maximum of 1,706 sea lions were
counted at Pier 39 in 2009. However,
since then the population has averaged
at about 50–300 depending upon the
season (TMMC 2017). This group of sea
lions has decreased in size in recent
years, coincident with a fluctuating
decrease in the herring population in
the Bay. There are no known breeding
sites within San Francisco Bay. Their
primary breeding site is in the Channel
Islands (USACE 2011). The sea lions
appear at Pier 39 after returning from
the Channel Islands at the beginning of
August (Bauer 1999). No other sea lion
haul-out sites have been identified in
the Bay and no pupping has been
observed at the Pier 39 site or any other
site in San Francisco Bay under normal
conditions (USACE 2011). Although
there has been documentation of
pupping on docks in the Bay, this event
was during a domoic acid event. The
Port does not anticipate that any domoic
events will occur during the project
construction activities.
The project site is approximately four
miles away from Pier 39. Although there
is little information regarding the
foraging behavior of the California sea
lion in southern San Francisco Bay, they
have been observed foraging on a
regular basis in the shipping channel
south of Yerba Buena Island.
Foraging grounds have also been
identified for pinnipeds, including sea
lions, between Yerba Buena Island and
Treasure Island, as well as off the
Tiburon Peninsula (Caltrans, 2006). The
California sea lions that use the Pier 39
haul-out site may be feeding on Pacific
herring (Clupea harengus), northern
anchovy, and other prey in the waters
of San Francisco Bay (Caltrans, 2013a).
In addition to the Pier 39 haul-out,
California sea lions haul out on buoys
and similar structures throughout San
Francisco Bay. They mainly are seen
swimming off the San Francisco and
Marin shorelines within San Francisco
Bay, but may occasionally enter the
project area to forage.
Northern Elephant Seal
Northern elephant seal is common on
California coastal mainland and island
sites, where the species pups, breeds,
rests, and molts. The largest rookeries
are on San Nicolas and San Miguel
islands in the northern Channel Islands.
Near the Bay, elephant seals breed,
molt, and haul out at An˜o Nuevo Island,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
the Farallon Islands, and Point Reyes
National Seashore.
Northern elephant seals haul out to
give birth and breed from December
through March. Pups remain onshore or
in adjacent shallow water through May.
Both sexes make two foraging
migrations each year: One after breeding
and the second after molting (Stewart
1989; Stewart and DeLong 1995). Adult
females migrate to the central North
Pacific to forage, and males migrate to
the Gulf of Alaska to forage (Robinson
et al. 2012). Pup mortality is high when
they make the first trip to sea in May,
and this period correlates with the time
of most strandings. Pups of the year
return in the late summer and fall, to
haul out at breeding rookery and small
haul out sites, but occasionally they
may make brief stops in the Bay.
Generally, only juvenile elephant
seals enter the Bay and do not remain
long. The most recent sighting near the
project area was in 2012, on the beach
at Clipper Cove on Treasure Island,
when a healthy yearling elephant seal
hauled out for approximately 1 day.
Approximately 100 juvenile northern
elephant seals strand in or near the Bay
each year, including individual
strandings at Yerba Buena Island (YBI)
and Treasure Island (less than 10
strandings per year).
Northern Fur Seal
Northern fur seal breeds on the
offshore islands of California and in the
Bering Sea from May through July. Two
stocks of Northern fur seals may occur
near the Bay, the California and Eastern
Pacific stocks. The California stock
breeds, pups, and forages off the
California coast. The Eastern Pacific
stock breeds and pups on islands in the
Bering Sea, but females and juveniles
move south to California waters to
forage in the fall and winter months.
Both the California and Eastern
Pacific stocks forage in the offshore
waters of California, but only sick,
emaciated, or injured fur seals enter the
Bay. The Marine Mammal Center
(TMMC) occasionally picks up stranded
fur seals around YBI and Treasure
Island.
Marine Mammal Hearing
Hearing is the most important sensory
modality for marine mammals
underwater, and exposure to
anthropogenic sound can have
deleterious effects. To appropriately
assess the potential effects of exposure
to sound, it is necessary to understand
the frequency ranges marine mammals
are able to hear. Current data indicate
that not all marine mammal species
have equal hearing capabilities (e.g.,
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok and
Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings, 2008).
To reflect this, Southall et al. (2007)
recommended that marine mammals be
divided into functional hearing groups
based on directly measured or estimated
hearing ranges on the basis of available
behavioral response data, audiograms
derived using auditory evoked potential
techniques, anatomical modeling, and
other data. Note that no direct
measurements of hearing ability have
been successfully completed for
mysticetes (i.e., low-frequency
cetaceans). Subsequently, NMFS (2018)
described generalized hearing ranges for
these marine mammal hearing groups.
Generalized hearing ranges were chosen
based on the approximately 65 dB
threshold from the normalized
composite audiograms, with the
exception for lower limits for lowfrequency cetaceans where the lower
bound was deemed to be biologically
implausible and the lower bound from
Southall et al. (2007) retained. The
functional groups and the associated
frequencies are indicated below (note
that these frequency ranges correspond
to the range for the composite group,
with the entire range not necessarily
reflecting the capabilities of every
species within that group):
• Low-frequency cetaceans
(mysticetes): Generalized hearing is
estimated to occur between
approximately 7 Hz and 35 kHz;
• Mid-frequency cetaceans (larger
toothed whales, beaked whales, and
most delphinids): Generalized hearing is
estimated to occur between
approximately 150 Hz and 160 kHz;
• High-frequency cetaceans
(porpoises, river dolphins, and members
of the genera Kogia and
Cephalorhynchus; including two
members of the genus Lagenorhynchus,
on the basis of recent echolocation data
and genetic data): Generalized hearing is
estimated to occur between
approximately 275 Hz and 160 kHz.
• Pinnipeds in water; Phocidae (true
seals): Generalized hearing is estimated
to occur between approximately 50 Hz
to 86 kHz;
• Pinnipeds in water; Otariidae (eared
seals): Generalized hearing is estimated
to occur between 60 Hz and 39 kHz.
The pinniped functional hearing
group was modified from Southall et al.
(2007) on the basis of data indicating
that phocid species have consistently
demonstrated an extended frequency
range of hearing compared to otariids,
especially in the higher frequency range
(Hemila¨ et al., 2006; Kastelein et al.,
2009; Reichmuth and Holt, 2013).
For more detail concerning these
groups and associated frequency ranges,
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
please see NMFS (2018) for a review of
available information. Seven marine
mammal species (three cetacean and
four pinniped (two otariid and two
phocid) species) have the reasonable
potential to co-occur with the proposed
survey activities. Please refer to Table 2.
Of the cetacean species that may be
present, the gray whale is classified as
a low-frequency cetacean, the bottlenose
dolphin is classified as a mid-frequency
cetacean, and the harbor porpoise is
classified as a high-frequency cetacean.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Potential Effects of Specified Activities
on Marine Mammals and Their Habitat
This section includes a summary and
discussion of the ways that components
of the specified activity may impact
marine mammals and their habitat. The
‘‘Estimated Take’’ section later in this
document includes a quantitative
analysis of the number of individuals
that are expected to be taken by this
activity. The ‘‘Negligible Impact
Analysis and Determination’’ section
considers the content of this section, the
‘‘Estimated Take’’ section, and the
‘‘Proposed Mitigation’’ section, to draw
conclusions regarding the likely impacts
of these activities on the reproductive
success or survivorship of individuals
and how those impacts on individuals
are likely to impact marine mammal
species or stocks.
Description of Sound
Sound travels in waves, the basic
components of which are frequency,
wavelength, velocity, and amplitude.
Frequency is the number of pressure
waves that pass by a reference point per
unit of time and is measured in Hz or
cycles per second. Wavelength is the
distance between two peaks of a sound
wave; lower frequency sounds have
longer wavelengths than higher
frequency sounds. Amplitude is the
height of the sound pressure wave or the
‘loudness’ of a sound and is typically
measured using the dB scale. A dB is
the ratio between a measured pressure
(with sound) and a reference pressure
(sound at a constant pressure,
established by scientific standards). It is
a logarithmic unit that accounts for large
variations in amplitude; therefore,
relatively small changes in dB ratings
correspond to large changes in sound
pressure. When referring to sound
pressure levels (SPLs; the sound force
per unit area), sound is referenced in the
context of underwater sound pressure to
one microPascal (mPa). One pascal is the
pressure resulting from a force of one
newton exerted over an area of one
square meter (m2). The source level (SL)
represents the sound level at a distance
of 1 m from the source (referenced to 1
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
mPa). The received level is the sound
level at the listener’s position. Note that
all underwater sound levels in this
document are referenced to a pressure of
1 mPa and all airborne sound levels in
this document are referenced to a
pressure of 20 mPa.
Root mean square (rms) is the
quadratic mean sound pressure over the
duration of an impulse. Rms is
calculated by squaring all of the sound
amplitudes, averaging the squares, and
then taking the square root of the
average (Urick 1983). Rms accounts for
both positive and negative values;
squaring the pressures makes all values
positive so that they may be accounted
for in the summation of pressure levels
(Hastings and Popper 2005). This
measurement is often used in the
context of discussing behavioral effects,
in part because behavioral effects,
which often result from auditory cues,
may be better expressed through
averaged units than by peak pressures.
When underwater objects vibrate or
activity occurs, sound-pressure waves
are created. These waves alternately
compress and decompress the water as
the sound wave travels. Underwater
sound waves radiate in all directions
away from the source (similar to ripples
on the surface of a pond), except in
cases where the source is directional.
The compressions and decompressions
associated with sound waves are
detected as changes in pressure by
aquatic life and man-made sound
receptors such as hydrophones.
Even in the absence of sound from the
specified activity, the underwater
environment is typically loud due to
ambient sound. Ambient sound is
defined as environmental background
sound levels lacking a single source or
point (Richardson et al., 1995), and the
sound level of a region is defined by the
total acoustical energy being generated
by known and unknown sources. These
sources may include physical (e.g.,
waves, earthquakes, ice, atmospheric
sound), biological (e.g., sounds
produced by marine mammals, fish, and
invertebrates), and anthropogenic sound
(e.g., vessels, dredging, aircraft,
construction). A number of sources
contribute to ambient sound, including
the following (Richardson et al., 1995):
• Wind and waves: The complex
interactions between wind and water
surface, including processes such as
breaking waves and wave-induced
bubble oscillations and cavitation, are a
main source of naturally occurring
ambient noise for frequencies between
200 Hz and 50 kilohertz (kHz) (Mitson
1995). In general, ambient sound levels
tend to increase with increasing wind
speed and wave height. Surf noise
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42471
becomes important near shore, with
measurements collected at a distance of
8.5 km from shore showing an increase
of 10 dB in the 100 to 700 Hz band
during heavy surf conditions.
• Precipitation: Sound from rain and
hail impacting the water surface can
become an important component of total
noise at frequencies above 500 Hz, and
possibly down to 100 Hz during quiet
times.
• Biological: Marine mammals can
contribute significantly to ambient noise
levels, as can some fish and shrimp. The
frequency band for biological
contributions is from approximately 12
Hz to over 100 kHz.
• Anthropogenic: Sources of ambient
noise related to human activity include
transportation (surface vessels and
aircraft), dredging and construction, oil
and gas drilling and production, seismic
surveys, sonar, explosions, and ocean
acoustic studies. Shipping noise
typically dominates the total ambient
noise for frequencies between 20 and
300 Hz. In general, the frequencies of
anthropogenic sounds are below 1 kHz
and, if higher frequency sound levels
are created, they attenuate rapidly
(Richardson et al., 1995). Sound from
identifiable anthropogenic sources other
than the activity of interest (e.g., a
passing vessel) is sometimes termed
background sound, as opposed to
ambient sound.
The sum of the various natural and
anthropogenic sound sources at any
given location and time—which
comprise ‘‘ambient’’ or ‘‘background’’
sound—depends not only on the source
levels (as determined by current
weather conditions and levels of
biological and shipping activity) but
also on the ability of sound to propagate
through the environment. In turn, sound
propagation is dependent on the
spatially and temporally varying
properties of the water column and sea
floor, and is frequency-dependent. As a
result of the dependence on a large
number of varying factors, ambient
sound levels can be expected to vary
widely over both coarse and fine spatial
and temporal scales. Sound levels at a
given frequency and location can vary
by 10–20 dB from day to day
(Richardson et al., 1995). The result is
that, depending on the source type and
its intensity, sound from the specified
activity may be a negligible addition to
the local environment or could form a
distinctive signal that may affect marine
mammals.
Description of Sound Sources
In-water construction activities
associated with the project would
include impact pile driving, vibratory
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
42472
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
pile driving, vibratory pile removal, and
down the hole drilling. The sounds
produced by these activities fall into
one of two general sound types:
Impulsive and non-impulsive (defined
in the following). The distinction
between these two sound types is
important because they have differing
potential to cause physical effects,
particularly with regard to hearing (e.g.,
Ward 1997 in Southall et al., 2007).
Please see Southall et al. (2007) for an
in-depth discussion of these concepts.
Impulsive sound sources (e.g.,
explosions, gunshots, sonic booms,
impact pile driving) produce signals
that are brief (typically considered to be
less than one second), broadband, atonal
transients (ANSI 1986; Harris 1998;
NIOSH 1998; ISO 2003; ANSI 2005) and
occur either as isolated events or
repeated in some succession. Impulsive
sounds are all characterized by a
relatively rapid rise from ambient
pressure to a maximal pressure value
followed by a rapid decay period that
may include a period of diminishing,
oscillating maximal and minimal
pressures, and generally have an
increased capacity to induce physical
injury as compared with sounds that
lack these features.
Non-impulsive sounds can be tonal,
narrowband, or broadband, brief or
prolonged, and may be either
continuous or non-continuous (NIOSH
1998). Some of these non-impulsive
sounds can be transient signals of short
duration but without the essential
properties of impulses (e.g., rapid rise
time). Examples of non-impulsive
sounds include those produced by
vessels, aircraft, machinery operations
such as drilling or dredging, vibratory
pile driving, and active sonar systems.
The duration of such sounds, as
received at a distance, can be greatly
extended in a highly reverberant
environment.
Impact hammers operate by
repeatedly dropping a heavy piston onto
a pile to drive the pile into the substrate.
Sound generated by impact hammers is
characterized by rapid rise times and
high peak levels, a potentially injurious
combination (Hastings and Popper
2005). Vibratory hammers install piles
by vibrating them and allowing the
weight of the hammer to push them into
the sediment. Vibratory hammers
produce significantly less sound than
impact hammers. Peak SPLs may be 180
dB or greater, but are generally 10 to 20
dB lower than SPLs generated during
impact pile driving of the same-sized
pile (Oestman et al., 2009). Rise time is
slower, reducing the probability and
severity of injury, and sound energy is
distributed over a greater amount of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
time (Nedwell and Edwards 2002;
Carlson et al., 2005).
Acoustic Impacts
Anthropogenic sounds cover a broad
range of frequencies and sound levels
and can have a range of highly variable
impacts on marine life, from none or
minor to potentially severe responses,
depending on received levels, duration
of exposure, behavioral context, and
various other factors. The potential
effects of underwater sound from active
acoustic sources can potentially result
in one or more of the following direct
impacts on marine mammals; temporary
or permanent hearing impairment, nonauditory physical or physiological
effects, behavioral disturbance, stress,
and masking (Richardson et al., 1995;
Gordon et al., 2004; Nowacek et al.,
2007; Southall et al., 2007; Gotz et al.,
2009). The degree of effect is
intrinsically related to the signal
characteristics, received level, distance
from the source, and duration of the
sound exposure. In general, sudden,
high level sounds can cause hearing
loss, as can longer exposures to lower
level sounds. Temporary or permanent
loss of hearing will occur almost
exclusively for noise within an animal’s
hearing range. We first describe specific
manifestations of acoustic effects before
providing discussion specific to the Port
of San Fancisco’s construction
activities.
Richardson et al. (1995) described
zones of increasing intensity of effect
that might be expected to occur, in
relation to distance from a source and
assuming that the signal is within an
animal’s hearing range. First is the area
within which the acoustic signal would
be audible (potentially perceived) to the
animal, but not strong enough to elicit
any overt behavioral or physiological
response. The next zone corresponds
with the area where the signal is audible
to the animal and of sufficient intensity
to elicit behavioral or physiological
responsiveness. Third is a zone within
which, for signals of high intensity, the
received level is sufficient to potentially
cause discomfort or tissue damage to
auditory or other systems. Overlaying
these zones to a certain extent is the
area within which masking (i.e., when a
sound interferes with or masks the
ability of an animal to detect a signal of
interest that is above the absolute
hearing threshold) may occur; the
masking zone may be highly variable in
size.
We describe the more severe effects
(i.e., permanent hearing impairment,
certain non-auditory physical or
physiological effects) only briefly as we
do not expect that there is a reasonable
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
likelihood that the Port of San
Francisco’s activities may result in such
effects (see below for further
discussion). Marine mammals exposed
to high-intensity sound, or to lowerintensity sound for prolonged periods,
can experience hearing threshold shift
(TS), which is the loss of hearing
sensitivity at certain frequency ranges
(Kastak et al., 1999; Schlundt et al.,
2000; Finneran et al., 2002, 2005). TS
can be permanent (PTS), in which case
the loss of hearing sensitivity is not
fully recoverable, or temporary (TTS), in
which case the animal’s hearing
threshold would recover over time
(Southall et al., 2007). Repeated sound
exposure that leads to TTS could cause
PTS. In severe cases of PTS, there can
be total or partial deafness, while in
most cases the animal has an impaired
ability to hear sounds in specific
frequency ranges (Kryter 1985).
When PTS occurs, there is physical
damage to the sound receptors in the ear
(i.e., tissue damage), whereas TTS
represents primarily tissue fatigue and
is reversible (Southall et al., 2007). In
addition, other investigators have
suggested that TTS is within the normal
bounds of physiological variability and
tolerance and does not represent
physical injury (e.g., Ward 1997).
Therefore, NMFS does not consider TTS
to constitute auditory injury.
Relationships between TTS and PTS
thresholds have not been studied in
marine mammals—PTS data exists only
for a single harbor seal (Kastak et al.,
2008)—but are assumed to be similar to
those in humans and other terrestrial
mammals. PTS typically occurs at
exposure levels at least several dB above
a 40-dB threshold shift approximates
PTS onset; e.g., Kryter et al., 1966;
Miller, 1974 found that inducing mild
TTS (a 6-dB threshold shift)
approximates TTS onset (e.g., Southall
et al., 2007). Based on data from
terrestrial mammals, a precautionary
assumption is that the PTS thresholds
for impulsive sounds (such as impact
pile driving sounds received close to the
source) are at least 6 dB higher than the
TTS threshold on a peak-pressure basis
and PTS cumulative sound exposure
level thresholds are 15 to 20 dB higher
than TTS cumulative sound exposure
level thresholds (Southall et al., 2007).
Given the higher level of sound or
longer exposure duration necessary to
cause PTS as compared with TTS, it is
considerably less likely that PTS could
occur.
TTS is the mildest form of hearing
impairment that can occur during
exposure to sound (Kryter 1985). While
experiencing TTS, the hearing threshold
rises, and a sound must be at a higher
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
level in order to be heard. In terrestrial
and marine mammals, TTS can last from
minutes or hours to days (in cases of
strong TTS). In many cases, hearing
sensitivity recovers rapidly after
exposure to the sound ends. Few data
on sound levels and durations necessary
to elicit mild TTS have been obtained
for marine mammals.
Marine mammal hearing plays a
critical role in communication with
conspecifics, and interpretation of
environmental cues for purposes such
as predator avoidance and prey capture.
Depending on the degree (elevation of
threshold in dB), duration (i.e., recovery
time), and frequency range of TTS, and
the context in which it is experienced,
TTS can have effects on marine
mammals ranging from discountable to
serious. For example, a marine mammal
may be able to readily compensate for
a brief, relatively small amount of TTS
in a non-critical frequency range that
occurs during a time where ambient
noise is lower and there are not as many
competing sounds present.
Alternatively, a larger amount and
longer duration of TTS sustained during
a time when communication is critical
for successful mother/calf interactions
could have more serious impacts.
Currently, TTS data only exist for four
species of cetaceans (bottlenose dolphin
(Tursiops truncatus), beluga whale
(Delphinapterus leucas), harbor
porpoise, and Yangtze finless porpoise
(Neophocoena asiaeorientalis) and three
species of pinnipeds (northern elephant
seal, harbor seal, and California sea lion)
exposed to a limited number of sound
sources (i.e., mostly tones and octaveband noise) in laboratory settings (e.g.,
Finneran et al., 2002; Nachtigall et al.,
2004; Kastak et al., 2005; Lucke et al.,
2009; Popov et al., 2011). In general,
harbor seals (Kastak et al., 2005;
Kastelein et al., 2012a) and harbor
porpoises (Lucke et al., 2009; Kastelein
et al., 2012b) have a lower TTS onset
than other measured pinniped or
cetacean species. Additionally, the
existing marine mammal TTS data come
from a limited number of individuals
within these species. There are no data
available on noise-induced hearing loss
for mysticetes. For summaries of data on
TTS in marine mammals or for further
discussion of TTS onset thresholds,
please see Finneran (2015).
In addition to PTS and TTS, there is
a potential for non-auditory
physiological effects or injuries that
theoretically might occur in marine
mammals exposed to high level
underwater sound or as a secondary
effect of extreme behavioral reactions
(e.g., change in dive profile as a result
of an avoidance reaction) caused by
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
exposure to sound. These impacts can
include neurological effects, bubble
formation, resonance effects, and other
types of organ or tissue damage (Cox et
al., 2006; Southall et al., 2007; Zimmer
and Tyack 2007). The Port of San
Francisco’s activities do not involve the
use of devices such as explosives or
mid-frequency active sonar that are
associated with these types of effects.
These impacts are not anticipated to
occur as a result of the Port’s work and
are not discussed further.
When a live or dead marine mammal
swims or floats onto shore and is
incapable of returning to sea, the event
is termed a ‘‘stranding’’ (16 U.S.C.
1421h(3)). Marine mammals are known
to strand for a variety of reasons, such
as infectious agents, biotoxicosis,
starvation, fishery interaction, ship
strike, unusual oceanographic or
weather events, sound exposure, or
combinations of these stressors
sustained concurrently or in series (e.g.,
Geraci et al., 1999). However, the cause
or causes of most strandings are
unknown (e.g., Best 1982).
Combinations of dissimilar stressors
may combine to kill an animal or
dramatically reduce its fitness, even
though one exposure without the other
would not be expected to produce the
same outcome (e.g., Sih et al., 2004). For
further description of stranding events
see, e.g., Southall et al., 2006; Jepson et
al., 2013; Wright et al., 2013.
Behavioral Effects
Behavioral disturbance may include a
variety of effects, including subtle
changes in behavior (e.g., minor or brief
avoidance of an area or changes in
vocalizations), more conspicuous
changes in similar behavioral activities,
and more sustained and/or potentially
severe reactions, such as displacement
from or abandonment of high-quality
habitat. Behavioral responses to sound
are highly variable and context-specific
and any reactions depend on numerous
intrinsic and extrinsic factors (e.g.,
species, state of maturity, experience,
current activity, reproductive state,
auditory sensitivity, time of day), as
well as the interplay between factors
(e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok et
al., 2003; Southall et al., 2007; Weilgart,
2007; Archer et al., 2010). Behavioral
reactions can vary not only among
individuals but also within an
individual, depending on previous
experience with a sound source,
context, and numerous other factors
(Ellison et al., 2012), and can vary
depending on characteristics associated
with the sound source (e.g., whether it
is moving or stationary, number of
sources, distance from the source).
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42473
Please see Appendices B–C of Southall
et al. (2007) for a review of studies
involving marine mammal behavioral
responses to sound.
Habituation can occur when an
animal’s response to a stimulus wanes
with repeated exposure, usually in the
absence of unpleasant associated events
(Wartzok et al., 2003). Animals are most
likely to habituate to sounds that are
predictable and unvarying. It is
important to note that habituation is
appropriately considered as a
‘‘progressive reduction in response to
stimuli that are perceived as neither
aversive nor beneficial,’’ rather than as,
more generally, moderation in response
to human disturbance (Bejder et al.,
2009). The opposite process is
sensitization, when an unpleasant
experience leads to subsequent
responses, often in the form of
avoidance, at a lower level of exposure.
As noted, behavioral state may affect the
type of response. For example, animals
that are resting may show greater
behavioral change in response to
disturbing sound levels than animals
that are highly motivated to remain in
an area for feeding (Richardson et al.,
1995; NRC 2003; Wartzok et al., 2003).
Controlled experiments with captive
marine mammals have showed
pronounced behavioral reactions,
including avoidance of loud sound
sources (Ridgway et al., 1997; Finneran
et al., 2003). Observed responses of wild
marine mammals to loud-impulsive
sound sources (typically seismic airguns
or acoustic harassment devices) have
been varied but often consist of
avoidance behavior or other behavioral
changes suggesting discomfort (Morton
and Symonds 2002; see also Richardson
et al., 1995; Nowacek et al., 2007).
Available studies show wide variation
in response to underwater sound;
therefore, it is difficult to predict
specifically how any given sound in a
particular instance might affect marine
mammals perceiving the signal. If a
marine mammal does react briefly to an
underwater sound by changing its
behavior or moving a small distance, the
impacts of the change are unlikely to be
significant to the individual, let alone
the stock or population. However, if a
sound source displaces marine
mammals from an important feeding or
breeding area for a prolonged period,
impacts on individuals and populations
could be significant (e.g., Lusseau and
Bejder 2007; Weilgart 2007; NRC 2005).
However, there are broad categories of
potential response, which we describe
in greater detail here, that include
alteration of dive behavior, alteration of
foraging behavior, effects to breathing,
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
42474
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
interference with or alteration of
vocalization, avoidance, and flight.
Changes in dive behavior can vary
widely, and may consist of increased or
decreased dive times and surface
intervals as well as changes in the rates
of ascent and descent during a dive (e.g.,
Frankel and Clark 2000; Costa et al.,
2003; Ng and Leung 2003; Nowacek et
al., 2004; Goldbogen et al., 2013a,b).
Variations in dive behavior may reflect
interruptions in biologically significant
activities (e.g., foraging) or they may be
of little biological significance. The
impact of an alteration to dive behavior
resulting from an acoustic exposure
depends on what the animal is doing at
the time of the exposure and the type
and magnitude of the response.
Disruption of feeding behavior can be
difficult to correlate with anthropogenic
sound exposure, so it is usually inferred
by observed displacement from known
foraging areas, the appearance of
secondary indicators (e.g., bubble nets
or sediment plumes), or changes in dive
behavior. As for other types of
behavioral response, the frequency,
duration, and temporal pattern of signal
presentation, as well as differences in
species sensitivity, are likely
contributing factors to differences in
response in any given circumstance
(e.g., Croll et al., 2001; Nowacek et al.;
2004; Madsen et al., 2006; Yazvenko et
al., 2007). A determination of whether
foraging disruptions incur fitness
consequences would require
information on or estimates of the
energetic requirements of the affected
individuals and the relationship
between prey availability, foraging effort
and success, and the life history stage of
the animal.
Variations in respiration naturally
occur with different behaviors and
alterations to breathing rate as a
function of acoustic exposure can be
expected to co-occur with other
behavioral reactions, such as a flight
response or an alteration in diving.
However, respiration rates in and of
themselves may be representative of
annoyance or an acute stress response.
Various studies have shown that
respiration rates may either be
unaffected or could increase, depending
on the species and signal characteristics,
again highlighting the importance in
understanding species differences in the
tolerance of underwater noise when
determining the potential for impacts
resulting from anthropogenic sound
exposure (e.g., Kastelein et al., 2001,
2005, 2006; Gailey et al., 2007).
Marine mammals vocalize for
different purposes and across multiple
modes, such as whistling, echolocation
click production, calling, and singing.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
Changes in vocalization behavior in
response to anthropogenic noise can
occur for any of these modes and may
result from a need to compete with an
increase in background noise or may
reflect increased vigilance or a startle
response. For example, in the presence
of potentially masking signals,
humpback whales and killer whales
have been observed to increase the
length of their songs (Miller et al., 2000;
Fristrup et al., 2003; Foote et al., 2004),
while right whales (Eubalaena glacialis)
have been observed to shift the
frequency content of their calls upward
while reducing the rate of calling in
areas of increased anthropogenic noise
(Parks et al., 2007). In some cases,
animals may cease sound production
during production of aversive signals
(Bowles et al., 1994).
Avoidance is the displacement of an
individual from an area or migration
path because of the presence of a sound
or other stressors, and is one of the most
obvious manifestations of disturbance in
marine mammals (Richardson et al.,
1995). For example, gray whales are
known to change direction—deflecting
from customary migratory paths—in
order to avoid noise from seismic
surveys (Malme et al., 1984). Avoidance
may be short-term, with animals
returning to the area once the noise has
ceased (e.g., Bowles et al., 1994; Goold,
1996; Stone et al., 2000; Morton and
Symonds, 2002; Gailey et al., 2007).
Longer-term displacement is possible,
however, which may lead to changes in
abundance or distribution patterns of
the affected species in the affected
region if habituation to the presence of
the sound does not occur (e.g.,
Blackwell et al., 2004; Bejder et al.,
2006; Teilmann et al., 2006).
A flight response is a dramatic change
in normal movement to a directed and
rapid movement away from the
perceived location of a sound source.
The flight response differs from other
avoidance responses in the intensity of
the response (e.g., directed movement,
rate of travel). Relatively little
information on flight responses of
marine mammals to anthropogenic
signals exist, although observations of
flight responses to the presence of
predators have occurred (Connor and
Heithaus 1996). The result of a flight
response could range from brief,
temporary exertion and displacement
from the area where the signal provokes
flight to, in extreme cases, marine
mammal strandings (Evans and England
2001). However, it should be noted that
response to a perceived predator does
not necessarily invoke flight (Ford and
Reeves 2008), and whether individuals
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
are solitary or in groups may influence
the response.
Behavioral disturbance can also
impact marine mammals in more subtle
ways. Increased vigilance may result in
costs related to diversion of focus and
attention (i.e., when a response consists
of increased vigilance, it may come at
the cost of decreased attention to other
critical behaviors such as foraging or
resting). These effects have generally not
been demonstrated for marine
mammals, but studies involving fish
and terrestrial animals have shown that
increased vigilance may substantially
reduce feeding rates (e.g., Beauchamp
and Livoreil 1997; Fritz et al., 2002;
Purser and Radford 2011). In addition,
chronic disturbance can cause
population declines through reduction
of fitness (e.g., decline in body
condition) and subsequent reduction in
reproductive success, survival, or both
(e.g., Harrington and Veitch, 1992; Daan
et al., 1996; Bradshaw et al., 1998).
However, Ridgway et al. (2006) reported
that increased vigilance in bottlenose
dolphins exposed to sound over a fiveday period did not cause any sleep
deprivation or stress effects.
Many animals perform vital functions,
such as feeding, resting, traveling, and
socializing, on a diel cycle (24-hour
cycle). Disruption of such functions
resulting from reactions to stressors
such as sound exposure are more likely
to be significant if they last more than
one diel cycle or recur on subsequent
days (Southall et al., 2007).
Consequently, a behavioral response
lasting less than one day and not
recurring on subsequent days is not
considered particularly severe unless it
could directly affect reproduction or
survival (Southall et al., 2007). Note that
there is a difference between multi-day
substantive behavioral reactions and
multi-day anthropogenic activities. For
example, just because an activity lasts
for multiple days does not necessarily
mean that individual animals are either
exposed to activity-related stressors for
multiple days or, further, exposed in a
manner resulting in sustained multi-day
substantive behavioral responses.
Behavioral Effects of the Port’s
Activities (Pile Driving and Drilling)
In the absence of mitigation, impacts
to marine species could be expected to
include physiological and behavioral
responses to the acoustic signature
(Viada et al., 2008). Potential effects
from impulsive sound sources like pile
driving can range in severity from
effects such as behavioral disturbance to
temporary or permanent hearing
impairment (Yelverton et al., 1973). Due
to the nature of the pile driving sounds
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
in the project, behavioral disturbance is
the most likely effect from the proposed
activity. Marine mammals exposed to
high intensity sound repeatedly or for
prolonged periods can experience
hearing threshold shifts. PTS constitutes
injury, but TTS does not (Southall et al.,
2007). Based on the nature of the Port’s
activity and the anticipated
effectiveness of the mitigation measures
(i.e., use of a bubble curtain, wood
cushion, and shutdown—discussed in
detail below in the Proposed Mitigation
section), PTS is not anticipated.
Therefore, the Port is not requesting and
NMFS is not proposing to authorize take
by Level A harassment related to this
project.
The effects of sounds from pile
driving, by impact or vibratory means,
pile removal, and down the hole drilling
might include one or more of the
following: Temporary or permanent
hearing impairment, non-auditory
physical or physiological effects,
behavioral disturbance, and masking
(Richardson et al., 1995; Gordon et al.,
2003; Nowacek et al., 2007; Southall et
al., 2007). The effects of pile driving and
drilling on marine mammals are
dependent on several factors, including
the type and depth of the animal; the
pile size and type, and the intensity and
duration of the pile driving sound; the
substrate; the standoff distance between
the pile and the animal; and the sound
propagation properties of the
environment. Impacts to marine
mammals from pile driving and pile
removal activities are expected to result
primarily from acoustic pathways. As
such, the degree of effect is intrinsically
related to the frequency, received level,
and duration of the sound exposure,
which are in turn influenced by the
distance between the animal and the
source. The further away from the
source, the less intense the exposure
should be. The substrate and depth of
the habitat affect the sound propagation
properties of the environment. In
addition, substrates that are soft (e.g.,
sand) would absorb or attenuate the
sound more readily than hard substrates
(e.g., rock), which may reflect the
acoustic wave.
Responses to continuous sound, such
as vibratory pile installation or down
the hole drilling, have not been
documented as well as responses to
impulsive sounds. With both types of
pile driving, it is likely that the onset of
pile driving could result in temporary,
short-term changes in an animal’s
typical behavior and/or avoidance of the
affected area. These behavioral changes
may include, based on more general
observations of behavioral responses to
sound exposure (Richardson et al.,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
1995): Changing durations of surfacing
and dives, number of blows per
surfacing, or moving direction and/or
speed; reduced/increased vocal
activities; changing/cessation of certain
behavioral activities (such as socializing
or feeding); visible startle response or
aggressive behavior (such as tail/fluke
slapping or jaw clapping); avoidance of
areas where sound sources are located;
and/or flight responses (e.g., pinnipeds
flushing into water from haulouts or
rookeries). Pinnipeds may increase their
haul-out time, possibly to avoid inwater disturbance (Thorson and Reyff
2006). If a marine mammal responds to
a stimulus by changing its behavior
(e.g., through relatively minor changes
in locomotion direction/speed or
vocalization behavior), the response
may or may not constitute taking at the
individual level, and is unlikely to
affect the stock or the species as a
whole. However, if a sound source
displaces marine mammals from an
important feeding or breeding area for a
prolonged period, impacts on animals,
and if so potentially on the stock or
species, could potentially be significant
(e.g., Lusseau and Bejder 2007; Weilgart
2007).
Natural and artificial sounds can
disrupt behavior by masking. The
frequency range of the potentially
masking sound is important in
determining any potential behavioral
impacts. Because sound generated from
in-water pile driving and removal is
mostly concentrated at low-frequency
ranges, it may have less effect on high
frequency echolocation sounds made by
porpoises. The most intense underwater
sounds in the Port’s proposed action are
those produced by impact pile driving.
Given that the energy distribution of
pile driving covers a broad frequency
spectrum, sound from these sources
would likely be within the audible
range of marine mammals present in the
project area. Impact pile driving activity
is relatively short-term, with rapid
impulsive sounds occurring for
approximately 20 minutes per pile in
this project. The probability for impact
pile driving resulting from this
proposed action masking acoustic
signals important to the behavior and
survival of marine mammal species is
low and if it occurred, it would be for
a short duration. Vibratory pile driving
is also relatively short-term, with rapid
oscillations occurring for approximately
20 minutes per pile in this project. It is
possible that vibratory pile driving
resulting from this proposed action may
mask acoustic signals important to the
behavior and survival of marine
mammal species, but the short-term
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42475
duration and limited affected area
would result in insignificant impacts
from masking.
Pinnipeds that occur near the project
site could be exposed to airborne
sounds associated with pile driving and
removal that have the potential to cause
behavioral harassment, depending on
their distance from pile driving
activities. Cetaceans are not expected to
be exposed to airborne sounds that
would result in harassment as defined
under the MMPA.
Airborne noise will primarily be an
issue for pinnipeds that are swimming
or hauled out near the project site
within the range of noise levels elevated
above the acoustic criteria. We
recognize that pinnipeds in the water
could be exposed to airborne sound that
may result in behavioral harassment
when looking with their heads above
water. Most likely, airborne sound
would cause behavioral responses
similar to those discussed above in
relation to underwater sound. For
instance, anthropogenic sound could
cause hauled-out pinnipeds to exhibit
changes in their normal behavior, such
as reduction in vocalizations, or cause
them to temporarily abandon the area
and move further from the source.
However, these animals would likely
previously have been ‘taken’ because of
exposure to underwater sound above the
behavioral harassment thresholds,
which are in all cases larger than those
associated with airborne sound. Thus,
the behavioral harassment of these
animals by airborne sound is already
accounted for in the estimates of
potential take from underwater
exposure to pile driving sounds.
Therefore, we do not believe that
authorization of additional incidental
take resulting from airborne sound for
pinnipeds is warranted, and airborne
sound is not discussed further here.
Stress Responses
An animal’s perception of a threat
may be sufficient to trigger stress
responses consisting of some
combination of behavioral responses,
autonomic nervous system responses,
neuroendocrine responses, or immune
responses (e.g., Seyle 1950; Moberg
2000). In many cases, an animal’s first
and sometimes most economical (in
terms of energetic costs) response is
behavioral avoidance of the potential
stressor. Autonomic nervous system
responses to stress typically involve
changes in heart rate, blood pressure,
and gastrointestinal activity. These
responses have a relatively short
duration and may or may not have a
significant long-term effect on an
animal’s fitness.
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
42476
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
Neuroendocrine stress responses often
involve the hypothalamus-pituitaryadrenal system. Virtually all
neuroendocrine functions that are
affected by stress—including immune
competence, reproduction, metabolism,
and behavior—are regulated by pituitary
hormones. Stress-induced changes in
the secretion of pituitary hormones have
been implicated in failed reproduction,
altered metabolism, reduced immune
competence, and behavioral disturbance
(e.g., Moberg 1987; Blecha 2000).
Increases in the circulation of
glucocorticoids are also equated with
stress (Romano et al., 2004).
The primary distinction between
stress (which is adaptive and does not
normally place an animal at risk) and
‘‘distress’’ is the cost of the response.
During a stress response, an animal uses
glycogen stores that can be quickly
replenished once the stress is alleviated.
In such circumstances, the cost of the
stress response would not pose serious
fitness consequences. However, when
an animal does not have sufficient
energy reserves to satisfy the energetic
costs of a stress response, energy
resources must be diverted from other
functions. This state of distress will last
until the animal replenishes its
energetic reserves sufficient to restore
normal function.
Relationships between these
physiological mechanisms, animal
behavior, and the costs of stress
responses are well studied through
controlled experiments and for both
laboratory and free-ranging animals
(e.g., Holberton et al., 1996; Hood et al.,
1998; Jessop et al., 2003; Krausman et
al., 2004; Lankford et al., 2005). Stress
responses due to exposure to
anthropogenic sounds or other stressors
and their effects on marine mammals
have also been reviewed (Fair and
Becker 2000; Romano et al., 2002b) and,
more rarely, studied in wild populations
(e.g., Romano et al., 2002a). For
example, Rolland et al. (2012) found
that noise reduction from reduced ship
traffic in the Bay of Fundy was
associated with decreased stress in
North Atlantic right whales. These and
other studies lead to a reasonable
expectation that some marine mammals
will experience physiological stress
responses upon exposure to acoustic
stressors and that it is possible that
some of these would be classified as
‘‘distress.’’ In addition, any animal
experiencing TTS would likely also
experience stress responses (NRC,
2003).
Anticipated Effects on Habitat
The proposed activities at the project
area would not result in permanent
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
negative impacts to habitats used
directly by marine mammals, but may
have potential short-term impacts to
food sources such as forage fish and
may affect acoustic habitat (see masking
discussion above). There are no known
foraging hotspots or other ocean bottom
structure of significant biological
importance to marine mammals present
in the marine waters of the project area
during the construction window. The
project area is located in an industrial
and commercial shipping port.
Therefore, the main impact issue
associated with the proposed activity
would be temporarily elevated sound
levels and the associated direct effects
on marine mammals, as discussed
previously in this document. The
primary potential acoustic impacts to
marine mammal habitat are associated
with elevated sound levels produced by
vibratory and impact pile driving,
drilling, and sediment removal in the
area. However, other potential impacts
to the surrounding habitat from physical
disturbance are also possible, although
this will be minimal since construction
is occurring in an already industrial and
commercial shipping area.
In-Water Construction Effects on
Potential Prey (Fish)
Construction activities would produce
continuous (i.e., vibratory pile driving,
drilling) and impulsive (i.e., impact
driving) sounds. Fish react to sounds
that are especially strong and/or
intermittent low-frequency sounds.
Short duration, sharp sounds can cause
overt or subtle changes in fish behavior
and local distribution. Hastings and
Popper (2005) identified several studies
that suggest fish may relocate to avoid
certain areas of sound energy.
Additional studies have documented
effects of pile driving on fish, although
several are based on studies in support
of large, multiyear bridge construction
projects (e.g., Scholik and Yan 2001,
2002; Popper and Hastings 2009). Sound
impulsive sounds at received levels of
160 dB may cause subtle changes in fish
behavior. SPLs of 180 dB may cause
noticeable changes in behavior (Pearson
et al., 1992; Skalski et al., 1992). SPLs
of sufficient strength have been known
to cause injury to fish and fish
mortality.
The most likely impact to fish from
pile driving and pile removal activities
at the Port’s project area would be
temporary behavioral avoidance of the
area. The duration of fish avoidance of
this area after pile driving stops is
unknown, but a rapid return to normal
recruitment, distribution and behavior
is anticipated. In general, impacts to
marine mammal prey species are
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
expected to be minor and temporary due
to the short timeframe (15 days) for the
project.
Pile Driving Effects on Potential
Foraging Habitat
The area likely impacted by the
project is relatively small compared to
the available habitat in the Mission Bay/
Central Waterfront area of San Francisco
Bay. Avoidance by potential prey (i.e.,
fish) of the immediate area due to the
temporary loss of this foraging habitat is
also possible. The duration of fish
avoidance of this area after pile driving
stops is unknown, but a rapid return to
normal recruitment, distribution and
behavior is anticipated. Any behavioral
avoidance by fish of the disturbed area
would still leave significantly large
areas of fish and marine mammal
foraging habitat in the nearby vicinity of
the MBFL and WTL on San Francisco
Bay.
The duration of the construction
activities, including pile driving and
dredging is relatively short, estimated at
55 days. The construction window for
pile driving and drilling is a maximum
of 15 days and each day, activities
would only occur for a few hours during
the day. Impacts to habitat and prey are
expected to be minimal based on the
short duration of activities.
In summary, given the short daily
duration of sound associated with
individual pile driving and removal
events and the relatively small areas
being affected, pile driving and pile
removal activities associated with the
proposed action are not likely to have a
permanent, adverse effect on any fish
habitat, or populations of fish species.
Thus, any impacts to marine mammal
habitat are not expected to cause
significant or long-term consequences
for individual marine mammals or their
populations.
Estimated Take
This section provides an estimate of
the number of incidental takes proposed
for authorization through this IHA,
which will inform both NMFS’
consideration of ‘‘small numbers’’ and
the negligible impact determination.
Harassment is the only type of take
expected to result from these activities.
Except with respect to certain activities
not pertinent here, section 3(18) of the
MMPA defines ‘‘harassment’’ as: any act
of pursuit, torment, or annoyance which
(i) has the potential to injure a marine
mammal or marine mammal stock in the
wild (Level A harassment); or (ii) has
the potential to disturb a marine
mammal or marine mammal stock in the
wild by causing disruption of behavioral
patterns, including, but not limited to,
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
migration, breathing, nursing, breeding,
feeding, or sheltering (Level B
harassment).
Authorized takes would be by Level B
harassment only, in the form of
disruption of behavioral patterns for
individual marine mammals resulting
from exposure to acoustic sources.
Based on the nature of the activity and
the anticipated effectiveness of the
mitigation measures (i.e., use of a
bubble curtain, wood cushion, and
shutdown—discussed in detail below in
the Proposed Mitigation section), Level
A harassment is neither anticipated nor
proposed to be authorized.
As described previously, no mortality
is anticipated or proposed to be
authorized for this activity. Below we
describe how the take is estimated.
Generally speaking, we estimate take
by considering: (1) Acoustic thresholds
above which NMFS believes the best
available science indicates marine
mammals will be behaviorally harassed
or incur some degree of permanent
hearing impairment; (2) the area or
volume of water that will be ensonified
above these levels in a day; (3) the
density or occurrence of marine
mammals within these ensonified areas;
and, (4) and the number of days of
activities. We note that while these
basic factors can contribute to a basic
calculation to provide an initial
prediction of takes, additional
information that can qualitatively
inform take estimates is also sometimes
available (e.g., previous monitoring
results or average group size). Below, we
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
describe these components in more
detail and present the proposed take
estimate.
Acoustic Thresholds
Using the best available science,
NMFS has developed acoustic
thresholds that identify the received
level of underwater sound above which
exposed marine mammals would be
reasonably expected to be behaviorally
harassed (equated to Level B
harassment) or to incur PTS of some
degree (equated to Level A harassment).
Level B Harassment for non-explosive
sources—Though significantly driven by
received level, the onset of behavioral
disturbance from anthropogenic noise
exposure is also informed to varying
degrees by other factors related to the
source (e.g., frequency, predictability,
duty cycle), the environment (e.g.,
bathymetry), and the receiving animals
(hearing, motivation, experience,
demography, behavioral context) and
can be difficult to predict (Southall et
al., 2007, Ellison et al., 2012). Based on
what the available science indicates and
the practical need to use a threshold
based on a factor that is both predictable
and measurable for most activities,
NMFS uses a generalized acoustic
threshold based on received level to
estimate the onset of behavioral
harassment. NMFS predicts that marine
mammals are likely to be behaviorally
harassed in a manner we consider Level
B harassment when exposed to
underwater anthropogenic noise above
received levels of 120 dB re 1 mPa (rms)
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42477
for continuous (e.g. vibratory piledriving, drilling) and above 160 dB re 1
mPa (rms) for non-explosive impulsive
(e.g., impact pile driving) sources.
The Port of San Francisco’s proposed
activity includes the use of continuous
(vibratory pile driving, down the hole
drilling) and impulsive (impact pile
driving) sources, and therefore the 120
and 160 dB re 1 mPa (rms) thresholds are
applicable.
Level A harassment for non-explosive
sources—NMFS’ Technical Guidance
for Assessing the Effects of
Anthropogenic Sound on Marine
Mammal Hearing (Version 2.0) (NMFS,
2018) identifies dual criteria to assess
auditory injury (Level A harassment) to
five different marine mammal groups
(based on hearing sensitivity) as a result
of exposure to noise from two different
types of sources (impulsive or nonimpulsive). The Port of San Francisco’s
proposed activity includes the use of
impulsive (impact pile driving) and
non-impulsive (vibratory pile driving)
sources.
These thresholds are provided in
Table 3 below. The references, analysis,
and methodology used in the
development of the thresholds are
described in NMFS’s 2018 Technical
Guidance, which may be accessed at:
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
national/marine-mammal-protection/
marine-mammal-acoustic-technicalguidance.
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42478
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
BILLING CODE 3510–22–C
Ensonified Area
Here, we describe operational and
environmental parameters of the activity
that will feed into identifying the area
ensonified above the acoustic
thresholds, which include source levels
and transmission loss coefficients.
Reference sound source levels used by
the Port of San Francisco for all
vibratory and impact piling/removal
and drilling activities were derived from
source level data from construction
projects within Caltrans (2015) except
for two cases noted below where Navy
and Alaska Department of
Transportation sources were used. To
determine the ensonified areas for both
the Level A and Level B harassment
zones for vibratory piling of the 36-inch,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
30-inch, and 16-inch steel piles and 14inch steel H piles, the Port of San
Francisco used SPLs of 170 dB re 1 mPa
rms, 170 dB re 1 mPa rms, 158 dB re 1
mPa rms, and 158 dB re 1 mPa rms,
respectively. These were derived from
vibratory pile driving data of 36-inch
(for 36-inch and 30-inch steel piles), 18inch (for 16-inch steel piles) and 14inch (for 14-inch steel H-pile) steel piles
reported in the values listed in Table
1.2–2 and Table 1.2.3 of Caltrans (2015),
and Table 6–1 of Navy (2017). For
vibratory pile removal, the Port of San
Francisco used an SPL of 155 dB re 1
mPa rms. This proxy source level was
derived from vibratory pile driving data
of 12-inch steel pipe piles in Caltrans
(2015; Table 1.2–2). In addition, for
down the hole drilling activities used to
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
place 24-inch octagonal concrete piles,
an SPL of 168 dB was used,
corresponding to the mean SPL reported
in Table 72 of the Alaska Department of
Transportation (2016) hydroacoustic
report.
For impact pile driving, the Port of
San Francisco used both SPLs and
Sound Exposure Levels (SEL) derived
from summary source level values
reported in Caltrans (2015). These
source levels were then reduced by 7 dB
due to the Port of San Francisco’s use
of a bubble curtain. NMFS used a
reduction value of 7 dB as it was
roughly the average sound reduction
value derived from sound
measurements of piles that used bubble
curtains within Caltrans (2015). For
piling of 36-inch steel piles, a source
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
EN22AU18.000
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
42479
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
level of 183 dB SEL was chosen as a
proxy value for modeling Level A
harassment zones (Caltrans 2015, Table
1.2–1). This source level was reduced to
176 dB SEL with the 7 dB reduction. For
piling of 20-inch concrete piles, a source
level of 167 dB SEL was chosen as a
proxy value for modeling Level A
harassment zones (Caltrans 2015, Table
1.5–4, reported from 24-inch concrete
pile measurements at a project in the
Port of Oakland). This source level was
selected as a proxy because of the
proximity of the Port of Oakland project
to the proposed work and is more
conservative than Caltrans (2015)
summary value reported in Table 1.2–1.
This source level was reduced to 160 dB
SEL with the 7 dB reduction. In
addition, for impact piling of 16-inch
steel piles, a source level of 158 dB SEL
was chosen as a proxy value for
modeling Level A harassment zones
(Joaquin River Project; Caltrans 2015,
Table 1.2–3). This source level was
reduced to 151 dB SEL with the 7 dB
reduction. The stated source levels and
their corresponding activity are
presented in Table 4 below.
TABLE 4—PROJECT SOURCE LEVELS
Source level
at 10 meters
(dB)
Activity
Vibratory Pile Driving/Removal
36-inch steel pile installation ......
30-inch steel pile installation
(Caisson).
14-inch steel H pile installation ..
Removal of pre-existing piles .....
16-inch steel pile installation ......
170 SPL
170 SPL
158 SPL
155 SPL
158 SPL
Impact Pile Driving *
36-inch steel pile installation ......
20-inch concrete pile installation
16-inch steel pile installation ......
176 SEL/186 SPL
160 SEL/172 SPL
151 SEL/177 SPL
Down the Hole Drilling
24-inch Octagonal Concrete
(drilling of 30-inch hole).
168 SPL
* The values in the cells reflect a 7dB reduction
due to the Port of San Francisco’s use of a bubble
curtain.
Level B Harassment Zones
The practical spreading model was
used by the Port of San Francisco to
generate the Level B harassment zones
for all piling/removal activities.
Practical spreading is described in full
detail below.
Pile driving and drilling generates
underwater noise that can potentially
result in disturbance to marine
mammals in the project area.
Transmission loss (TL) is the decrease
in acoustic intensity as an acoustic
pressure wave propagates out from a
source. TL parameters vary with
frequency, temperature, sea conditions,
current, source and receiver depth,
water depth, water chemistry, and
bottom composition and topography.
The general formula for underwater TL
is:
TL = B * log10 (R1/R2),
Where:
R1 = the distance of the modeled SPL from
the driven pile, and
R2 = the distance from the driven pile of the
initial measurement.
This formula neglects loss due to
scattering and absorption, which is
assumed to be zero here. The degree to
which underwater sound propagates
away from a sound source is dependent
on a variety of factors, most notably the
water bathymetry and presence or
absence of reflective or absorptive
conditions including in-water structures
and sediments. Spherical spreading
occurs in a perfectly unobstructed (freefield) environment not limited by depth
or water surface, resulting in a 6 dB
reduction in sound level for each
doubling of distance from the source (20
* log[range]). Cylindrical spreading
occurs in an environment in which
sound propagation is bounded by the
water surface and sea bottom, resulting
in a reduction of 3 dB in sound level for
each doubling of distance from the
source (10 * log[range]). A practical
spreading value of 15 is often used
under conditions where water increases
with depth as the receiver moves away
from the shoreline, resulting in an
expected propagation environment that
would lie between spherical and
cylindrical spreading loss conditions.
Utilizing the practical spreading loss
model, the Port of San Francisco
determined underwater noise will fall
below the behavioral effects threshold of
120 dB rms for marine mammals at a
maximum radial distance of 21,544
meters for vibratory piling and drilling
(36 and 30-inch steel piles; drilling for
24-inch octagonal concrete pile). The
maximum Level B harassment zone for
this activity will therefore be set at
21,544 meters. However, previous
sound monitoring for other projects in
San Francisco Bay (i.e. Caltrans 2015;
2016) have shown background sound
levels in the active portions of the Bay,
near the project area, to range from 110
to 140 dB rms, with typical background
levels in the range of 110 to 120 dB rms.
This ambient noise may affect the
ability to distinguish sound from
vibratory pile driving in the region
(Rodkin, 2009), but direct applicability
of that finding to the Port’s work is
unknown, and therefore no reduction in
Level B harassment zone is applied. The
maximum radial distance of the Level B
harassment zone for impact pile driving
equaled 541.2 meters (impact driving
36-inch steel piles). At this radial
distance, the entire Level B harassment
zone for impact piling equaled 0.3699
km2. This ensonified area is based on a
GIS map of the area accounting for
structures and landmasses which would
block sound spreading (Please see
Figure 9 of the Application). Table 5
below provides all Level B radial
distances and their corresponding areas
for each activity during the Port of San
Francisco’s project. Level B harassment
zone areas are calculated using a GIS
map (See Figure 9 of the Application).
TABLE 5—LEVEL B HARASSMENT ZONES CALCULATED USING THE PRACTICAL SPREADING MODEL
Calculated
distance to
Level B
threshold
(meters)
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Source
Level B
harassment
zone
(square
kilometers
km2)
Vibratory Pile Driving
36-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
30-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
16-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
14-inch steel H pile installation ................................................................................................................................
Removal of pre-existing concrete and wood piles ..................................................................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
21,544
21,544
21,544
3,415
2,154
47.1608
47.1608
47.1608
7.6431
3.1511
42480
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
TABLE 5—LEVEL B HARASSMENT ZONES CALCULATED USING THE PRACTICAL SPREADING MODEL—Continued
Level B
harassment
zone
(square
kilometers
km2)
Calculated
distance to
Level B
threshold
(meters)
Source
Impact Pile Driving
36-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
20-inch concrete pile installation .............................................................................................................................
16-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
541.2
63.1
215
0.36993
0.006650
0.074044
21,544
47.1608
Down the Hole Drilling
Level A Harassment Zones
When the NMFS Technical Guidance
(2016) was published, in recognition of
the fact that the ensonified area could be
more technically challenging to predict
because of the duration component in
the new thresholds, we developed a
User Spreadsheet that includes tools to
help predict a simple isopleth that can
be used in conjunction with marine
mammal density or occurrence to help
predict takes. We note that because of
some of the assumptions included in the
methods used for these tools, we
anticipate that isopleths produced are
typically going to be overestimates of
some degree, which will result in some
overestimate of Level A harassment.
However, these tools offer the best way
to predict appropriate isopleths when
more sophisticated 3D modeling
methods are not available, and NMFS
continues to develop ways to
quantitatively refine these tools, and
will qualitatively address the output
where appropriate. For stationary
sources (i.e. pile driving), NMFS’s User
Spreadsheet predicts the closest
distance at which, if a marine mammal
remained at that distance the whole
duration of the activity, it would not
incur PTS. Inputs used in the User
Spreadsheet, and the resulting isopleths
are reported below. Daily ensonified
areas for Level A harassment are
approximated as a semi-circle because
the pile driving and drilling are
occurring close to shore and the
coastline is approximately linear.
TABLE 6—PARAMETERS OF PILE DRIVING AND DRILLING ACTIVITY
Equipment type
Spreadsheet Tab Used ............
Source Level ............................
Weighting Factor Adjustment
(kHz).
(a) Activity duration (hours)
within 24 hours, (b) Number
of strikes per pile, (c) Number of piles per day.
Propagation (xLogR) ................
Distance of source level measurement (meters)+.
Vibratory
pile driver
(removal of
concrete and
wood piles)
Vibratory
pile driver
(installation
of 36-inch
steel piles)
Vibratory
pile driver
(installation
of 30-inch
steel piles)
Vibratory
pile driver
(installation
of 16-inch
steel piles)
Vibratory
pile driver
(installation
of 14-inch
steel H piles)
Impact
pile driver
(36-inch
steel piles)
Impact
pile driver
(20-inch
concrete piles)
Impact
pile driver
(16-inch
steel piles)
Drilling
(24-inch
octagonal
concrete
pile)
Non-impulsive,
continuous.
155 SPL .........
2.5 ..................
Non-impulsive,
continuous.
170 SPL .........
2.5 ..................
Non-impulsive,
continuous.
170 SPL .........
2.5 ..................
Non-impulsive,
continuous.
158 SPL .........
2.5 ..................
Non-impulsive,
continuous.
158 SPL .........
2.5 ..................
Impulsive, Noncontinuous.
176 SEL ............
2 ........................
Impulsive, Noncontinuous.
160 SEL ............
2 ........................
Impulsive, Noncontinuous.
151 SEL ............
2 ........................
Non-impulsive,
continuous.
168 SPL.
2.
(a) 0.4 ............
(a) 0.33 ..........
(a) 0.25 ..........
(a) .33 ............
(a) 0.33 ..........
(b) 150, (c) 4 ....
(b) 500, (c) 4 ....
(b) 500, (c) 2 ....
(a) 6.
15 ...................
10 ...................
15 ...................
10 ...................
15 ...................
10 ...................
15 ...................
10 ...................
15 ...................
10 ...................
15 ......................
10 ......................
15 ......................
10 ......................
15 ......................
10 ......................
15.
10.
TABLE 7—LEVEL A HARASSMENT ZONE ISOPLETH AND ENSONIFIED AREA FOR PILE DRIVING AND DRILLING
PTS isopleth
(meters)
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Source type
Lowfrequency
cetaceans
Midfrequency
cetaceans
Highfrequency
cetaceans
1.5
13.1
10.8
2.1
2.1
242.6
46.4
7.3
6.3
0.1
1.2
1.0
0.2
0.2
8.6
1.7
0.3
0.4
2.2
19.3
16.0
3.0
3.0
288.9
55.3
8.8
5.5
0.9
7.9
6.6
1.3
1.3
129.8
24.8
3.9
3.4
0.1
0.6
0.5
0.1
0.1
9.5
1.8
0.3
0.2
0.02
2.3
1.6
7.6
585
402
1.3
98
68
0.02
0.6
0.4
Vibratory Pile Driver (Removal of concrete and wood piles) ............................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 36-inch steel piles) ...................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 30-inch steel piles) ...................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 14-inch steel H piles) ................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 16-inch steel H piles) ................................
Impact Pile Driver (36-inch steel piles) ..............................................................
Impact Pile Driver (20-inch concrete piles) .......................................................
Impact Pile Driver (16-inch steel piles) ..............................................................
Drilling (24-inch octagonal concrete pile) ..........................................................
Phocid
pinnipeds
Otariid
pinnipeds
Daily ensonified area (m2)
Vibratory Pile Driver (Removal of concrete and wood piles) ............................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 36-inch steel piles) ...................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 30-inch steel piles) ...................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
3.5
270
183
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42481
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
TABLE 7—LEVEL A HARASSMENT ZONE ISOPLETH AND ENSONIFIED AREA FOR PILE DRIVING AND DRILLING—Continued
PTS isopleth
(meters)
Source type
Lowfrequency
cetaceans
Midfrequency
cetaceans
Highfrequency
cetaceans
6.9
6.9
92450
3380
84
62
0.06
0.06
120
4.5
0.1
0.3
14
14
131100
4800
120
48
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 14-inch steel H piles) ................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 16-inch steel H piles) ................................
Impact Pile Driver (36-inch steel piles) ..............................................................
Impact Pile Driver (20-inch concrete piles) .......................................................
Impact Pile Driver (16-inch steel piles) ..............................................................
Drilling (24-inch octagonal concrete pile) ..........................................................
Marine Mammal Occurrence
In this section we provide the
information about the presence, density,
or group dynamics of marine mammals
that will inform the take calculations.
No systematic line transect surveys of
marine mammals have been performed
in San Francisco Bay. Therefore, the inwater densities of harbor seals,
California sea lions, and harbor
porpoises were calculated based on 17
years of observations during monitoring
for the San Francisco Bay-Oakland Bay
Bridge (SFOBB) construction and
demolition project (Caltrans 2018). Care
was taken to eliminate multiple
observations of the same animal,
although this can be difficult and is
likely that the same individual may
have been counted multiple times on
the same day. The amount of monitoring
performed per year varied, depending
on the frequency and duration of
construction activities with the
potential to affect marine mammals.
During the 257 days of monitoring from
2000 through 2017 (including 15 days of
baseline monitoring in 2003), 1,029
harbor seals, 83 California sea lions, and
24 harbor porpoises were observed in
waters in the project vicinity in total. In
2015, 2016, and 2017, the number of
harbor seals in the project area
increased significantly. In 2017, the
number of harbor porpoise in the project
area also increased significantly.
Therefore, a harbor seal density estimate
was calculated using the 2015–2017
data, and a harbor porpoise density
estimate was calculated using the 2017
data, which may better reflect the
current use of the project area by these
animals. These observations included
data from baseline, pre-, during, and
post-pile driving, mechanical
dismantling, on-shore blasting, and offshore implosion activities.
Insufficient sighting data exist to
estimate the density of bottlenose
dolphins. However, a single bottlenose
dolphin has been observed regularly
near the project site. One individual was
documented regularly, through photo
ID, over several months off the coast of
the former Alameda Air Station
(Perlman 2017).
Insufficient sighting data exist to
estimate elephant seal densities in the
Bay. Generally, only juvenile elephant
seals enter the Bay and do not remain
long. The most recent sighting near the
project area was in 2012, on the beach
at Clipper Cove on Treasure Island,
when a healthy yearling elephant seal
hauled out for approximately 1 day.
Approximately 100 juvenile northern
elephant seals strand in or near the Bay
each year, including individual
strandings at YBI and Treasure Island
(less than 10 strandings per year).
In addition, insufficient sighting data
exist to estimate northern fur seal and
gray whale densities in the Bay. Only
two to four northern fur seals strand in
the Bay each year, and they are unlikely
to occur in the project area. Also, during
the Caltrans Richmond-San Rafael
Bridge project, monitors recorded 12
Phocid
pinnipeds
2.7
2.7
26460
966
24
18
Otariid
pinnipeds
0.02
0.02
140
5.1
0.1
0.06
living and two dead gray whales in the
surveys performed in 2012. All sightings
were in either the Central or North Bay,
and all but two sightings occurred
during the months of April and May.
One gray whale was sighted in June and
one in October. The Oceanic Society has
tracked gray whale sightings since they
began returning to San Francisco Bay
regularly in the late 1990s. Most
sightings occurred just a mile or two
inside of the Golden Gate, with some
traveling into San Pablo Bay in the
northern part of the San Francisco Bay
(Self 2012). The Oceanic Society data
show that all age classes of gray whales
enter San Francisco Bay and they enter
as singles or in groups of up to five
individuals (Winning 2008). It is
estimated that two to six gray whales
enter San Francisco Bay in any given
year.
Numbers used for density calculations
are shown in Table 8. These numbers
were calculated from observations in
nearby waters of the San Francisco Bay
during San Francisco-Oakland Bay
Bridge construction conducted by
Caltrans (Caltrans 2018). These
observations occurred from 2000 to
2017 in a 2 km2 monitoring zone for
California sea lions, from 2015–2017 in
a 2 km2 monitoring zone for harbor
seals, and in 2017 in a 15 km2 zone for
harbor porpoise. In the cases where
densities were refined to capture a
narrower range of years to be
conservative, bold densities were used
for take calculations.
TABLE 8—ESTIMATED IN-WATER DENSITY OF MARINE MAMMAL SPECIES IN SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA
[Caltrans 2017]
Area of
monitoring
zone
(km2)
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Species observed
Days of
monitoring
Number of
animals
observed
Harbor Seals 2000–2017 ................................
Harbor Seals 2015–2017 ................................
California Sea Lions 2000–2017 ....................
Bottlenose Dolphins 2017 ...............................
2
2
2
2
257
47
257
6
1029
372
83
2
Harbor Porpoise 2000–2017 ...........................
3
257
24
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Density
animals/km2
2.002.
3.957.
0.161.
Insufficient sighting data exists to estimate
density.
0.031.
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42482
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
TABLE 8—ESTIMATED IN-WATER DENSITY OF MARINE MAMMAL SPECIES IN SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA—Continued
[Caltrans 2017]
Area of
monitoring
zone
(km2)
Species observed
Number of
animals
observed
Days of
monitoring
Density
animals/km2
Harbor Porpoise 2017 .....................................
Elephant Seal 2000–2017 ..............................
15
2
6
257
15
0
Northern Fur Seal 2000–2017 ........................
2
257
0
Gray Whale 2000–2017 ..................................
2
257
0
0.167.
Insufficient sighting data exists to estimate
density.
Insufficient sighting data exists to estimate
density.
Insufficient sighting data exists to estimate
density.
Notes:
Densities for Pacific harbor seals, California sea lions, and harbor porpoises are based on monitoring for the east span of the SFOBB from
2000 to 2017.
A second set of Pacific harbor seal densities were calculated from the increase in sightings recorded from 2015 to 2017.
A second set of harbor porpoise densities were calculated for the increase in sightings that were recorded in 2017.
Bold densities were used for take calculations.
Sources: CalTrans 2001, 2004b, 2013b, 2013c, 2014, 2015b, 2016, 2017; Perlman 2017.
For species without enough sightings
to construct a density estimate, we used
information based on group size and
frequency of sightings from previous
years of work to inform the number of
animals estimated to be taken, which is
detailed in the Take Estimation section
below.
Take Calculation and Estimation
Here we describe how the information
provided above is brought together to
produce a quantitative take estimate.
When density data was available,
Level B take for the project was
calculated by multiplying the density
times the largest Level B harassment
zone (km2) times the number of
construction days. Since density data
was only available for harbor seals,
harbor porpoises, and California sea
lions, these were the only species whose
take was calculated used this
methodology. Table 9 shows the number
of take calculated for species with
density and without density estimates.
For species without density
information, information on average
group size of the species was used. This
is discussed below Table 9.
TABLE 9—TAKE ESTIMATES AS A PERCENTAGE OF STOCK ABUNDANCE
Level B
harassment
zone
(km2) 1
Species
Density
animals/km2
Harbor Seal .....................
California Sea Lions ........
Harbor Porpoise ..............
Northern Elephant Seal ..
3.957 ..................................................................
0.161 ..................................................................
0.167 ..................................................................
Insufficient sighting data exists to estimate density.
Insufficient sighting data exists to estimate density.
Insufficient sighting data exists to estimate density.
Insufficient sighting data exists to estimate density.
Northern Fur Seal ...........
Gray Whale .....................
Bottlenose Dolphin ..........
Construction
days 2
Proposed
Level B
take
Percentage
of stock
47.1608
47.1608
47.1608
47.1608
15
15
15
15
2928
120
124
1
9.5
0.040
1.3
0.0006
47.1608
15
1
0.0002
47.1608
15
3
0.014
47.1608
15
15
3.3
1 Represents
2 Total
area of largest Level B zone during pile driving/removal and drilling activities.
construction days for pile driving/removal and drilling.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Gray Whale
Gray whales occasionally enter San
Francisco Bay during their northward
migration period of February and
March. Pile driving and drilling are not
proposed to occur during this time and
gray whales are not likely to be present
at other times of the year. It is estimated
that two to six gray whales enter the Bay
in any given year, but they are unlikely
to be present during the work period
(June 1 through November 30).
However, individual gray whales have
occasionally been observed in San
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
Francisco Bay during the work period,
and therefore it is conservatively
estimated that, at most, 3 gray whales,
or one average sized group, may be
exposed to Level B harassment during
the 15 days of pile driving/drilling.
Bottlenose Dolphin
When bottlenose dolphins are present
in San Francisco Bay, they are more
typically found close to the Golden
Gate. Recently, beginning in 2015, two
individuals have been observed
frequently in the vicinity of Oyster Point
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
(GGCR 2016, 2017; Perlman 2017) and
one individual has been observed near
Alameda (GGCR 2016). Observations of
bottlenose dolphins are primarily west
of Treasure Island and concentrated
along the nearshore areas of San
Francisco south to Redwood City
(Caltrans 2018). Bottlenose dolphins
rarely occur in San Francisco Bay, but
given the size of the Level B harassment
zone NMFS is proposing to authorize
take of 15 bottlenose dolphins by level
B harassment.
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
Northern Fur Seal
Observations of northern fur seals are
too few to establish a density for this
species in San Francisco Bay. The
Marine Mammal Center (TMMC)
reported only two to four northern fur
seal strandings in the Bay in 2015 and
2016 (in Marin, San Francisco, and
Santa Clara counties) (TMMC 2017). To
account for the possible rare presence of
the species in the action area, NMFS
proposes to authorize one level B take
of northern fur seal.
Northern Elephant Seal
Elephant seals breed between
December and March and have been
rarely cited in San Francisco Bay. It is
anticipated that if an elephant seal is
encountered at all during pile driving or
drilling it would be a juvenile. To
account for the possible rare presence of
the species in the action area, NMFS
proposed to authorize one level B take
of elephant seal.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Level A Harassment
High frequency cetaceans (including
harbor porpoise) have the largest Level
A harassment zone resulting from this
project as shown in Table 7. Estimated
take by Level A harassment for harbor
porpoise, based on density reported in
Table 8 and the Level A harassment
zone, is less than one individual
(Density * Days * Ensonified Area).
Given the required mitigation measures,
including shutdown zones which
exceed the Level A harassment zone,
NMFS proposes no authorization of
Level A harassment for harbor porpoise
or any marine mammal.
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under
Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA,
NMFS must set forth the permissible
methods of taking pursuant to such
activity, and other means of effecting
the least practicable impact on such
species or stock and its habitat, paying
particular attention to rookeries, mating
grounds, and areas of similar
significance, and on the availability of
such species or stock for taking for
certain subsistence uses (latter not
applicable for this action). NMFS
regulations require applicants for
incidental take authorizations to include
information about the availability and
feasibility (economic and technological)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
of equipment, methods, and manner of
conducting such activity or other means
of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact upon the affected species or
stocks and their habitat (50 CFR
216.104(a)(11)).
In evaluating how mitigation may or
may not be appropriate to ensure the
least practicable adverse impact on
species or stocks and their habitat, as
well as subsistence uses where
applicable, we carefully consider two
primary factors:
(1) The manner in which, and the
degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure(s) is
expected to reduce impacts to marine
mammals, marine mammal species or
stocks, and their habitat. This considers
the nature of the potential adverse
impact being mitigated (likelihood,
scope, range). It further considers the
likelihood that the measure will be
effective if implemented (probability of
accomplishing the mitigating result if
implemented as planned) the likelihood
of effective implementation (probability
implemented as planned); and
(2) The practicability of the measures
for applicant implementation, which
may consider such things as cost,
impact on operations.
In addition to the specific measures
described later in this section, the Port
must conduct briefings for construction
supervisors and crews, the monitoring
team, and Port staff prior to the start of
all pile driving activity, and when new
personnel join the work, in order to
explain responsibilities, communication
procedures, the marine mammal
monitoring protocol, and operational
procedures.
Timing Restrictions
All work will be conducted during
daylight hours. If poor environmental
conditions restrict full visibility of the
shutdown zone, pile installation would
be delayed.
Sound Attenuation
Sound attenuation methods will be
implemented for the duration of impact
pile driving to install 36-inch and
16-inch steel and 20-inch concrete piles
(i.e., cushion block, bubble curtain,
sleeve etc.) and shall implement the
following bubble curtain performance
standards:
• The bubble curtain must distribute
air bubbles around 100 percent of the
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42483
piling perimeter for the full depth of the
water column.
• The lowest bubble ring shall be in
contact with the mudline for the full
circumference of the ring, and the
weights attached to the bottom ring
shall ensure 100 percent mudline
contact. No parts of the ring or other
objects shall prevent full mudline
contact.
• The selected contractor will ensure
that personnel are trained in the proper
balancing of air flow to the bubblers and
shall require that construction
contractors submit an inspection/
performance report for approval by the
Port within 72 hours following the
performance test. Corrections to the
attenuation device to meet the
performance standards shall occur prior
to impact driving.
Shutdown Zone for In-Water Heavy
Machinery Work
For in-water heavy machinery work
(using, e.g., standard barges, tug boats,
barge-mounted excavators, or clamshell
equipment used to place or remove
material), a minimum 10 meter
shutdown zone shall be implemented. If
a marine mammal comes within 10
meters of such operations, operations
shall cease and vessels shall reduce
speed to the minimum level required to
maintain steerage and safe working
conditions. This type of work could
include (but is not limited to) the
following activities: (1) Vibratory pile
driving; (2) movement of the barge to
the pile location; (3) positioning of the
pile on the substrate via a crane (i.e.,
stabbing the pile); or (4) removal of the
pile from the water column/substrate
via a crane (i.e., deadpull).
Additional Shutdown Zones
For all pile driving/removal and
drilling activities, The Port of San
Francisco will establish a shutdown
zone for a marine mammal species that
is greater than its corresponding Level A
harassment zone. The purpose of a
shutdown zone is generally to define an
area within which shutdown of the
activity would occur upon sighting of a
marine mammal (or in anticipation of an
animal entering the defined area). The
shutdown zones for each of the pile
driving and drilling activities are listed
below in Table 10.
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42484
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
TABLE 10—SHUTDOWN ZONES
Shutdown zones
(meters)
Lowfrequency
cetaceans
(humpback
whale,
minke whale)
Source
Midfrequency
cetaceans
(Pacificwhite
sided
dolphin)
Highfrequency
cetaceans
(Dall’s
porpoise,
harbor
porpoise)
Phocid
(harbor seal)
Otariid
(sea lion)
In-Water Construction Activities *
In Water Heavy Construction (i.e., Barge movements, pile
positioning, deadpulling, and sound attenuation) ............
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
25
25
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
10
25
150
75
300
75
30
150
10
10
25
10
10
10
10
Vibratory Pile Driving
Vibratory Pile Driver (Removal of concrete and wood
piles) .................................................................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 14-inch steel H piles) ..
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 16-inch steel H piles) ..
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 30-inch steel piles) .....
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 36-inch steel piles) .....
10
10
10
25
25
Impact Pile Driving
Impact Pile Driver (16-inch steel piles) ................................
Impact Pile Driver (20-inch concrete piles) .........................
Impact Pile Driver (36-inch steel piles) ................................
125
75
250
Drilling
24-inch concrete pile (1 pile) (3 hours per day on 1 day) ...
Monitoring Zones
The Port of San Francisco will
establish and observe a monitoring
zone. The monitoring zones for this
project will differ based on activity. For
vibratory pile driving and down the
hole drilling, it may not be possible to
observe the entire Level B harassment
zones (areas where SPLs are equal to or
exceed 120 dB rms) due to their size.
The Port is expected to monitor and
record observations in the largest
reasonable portion of this Level B
harassment zone based on the number
10
of observers and visibility, but
conditions may require efforts to be
focused in a smaller monitoring zone.
For impact pile driving, the monitoring
zones are areas where SPLs are equal to
or exceed 160 dB rms. For vibratory pile
driving/drilling and impact pile driving
the Level B Harassment zones are
presented in Table 11 below. For the
vibratory pile driving and drilling
activities, it is noted that Level B
harassment zone radius and area will
not necessarily equal the monitoring
zone. These zones provide utility for
monitoring conducted for mitigation
purposes (i.e., shutdown zone
monitoring) by establishing monitoring
protocols for areas adjacent to the
shutdown zones. Monitoring of
disturbance zones enables observers to
be aware of and communicate the
presence of marine mammals in the
project area, but outside the shutdown
zone, and thus prepare for potential
shutdowns of activity. However, the
primary purpose of disturbance zone
monitoring is for documenting instances
of Level B harassment; disturbance zone
monitoring is discussed in detail later
(see Monitoring and Reporting).
TABLE 11—MONITORING ZONES
Radial
distance
to Level B
threshold
(meters)
Source
Level B
harassment
zone
(km2)
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Vibratory Pile Driving
36-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
30-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
16-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
14-inch steel H pile installation ................................................................................................................................
Removal of pre-existing concrete and wood piles ..................................................................................................
* 21,544
* 21,544
* 21,544
* 3,415
* 21,544
* 47.1608
* 47.1608
* 47.1608
* 7.6431
* 47.1608
541.2
63.1
0.3699
0.006650
Impact Pile Driving
36-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
20-inch concrete pile installation .............................................................................................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42485
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
TABLE 11—MONITORING ZONES—Continued
Radial
distance
to Level B
threshold
(meters)
Source
16-inch steel pile installation ...................................................................................................................................
Level B
harassment
zone
(km2)
215
0.074044
* 21,544
* 47.1608
Down the Hole Drilling
* The monitored radius and area of the Level B harassment zone may vary based on visibility.
Non-Authorized Take Prohibited
If a species enters or approaches the
Level B harassment zone and that
species is either not authorized for take
or its authorized takes are met, pile
driving, pile removal, and drilling
activities must shut down immediately
using delay and shut-down procedures.
Activities must not resume until the
animal has been confirmed to have left
the area or an observation time period
of 15 minutes has elapsed.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Soft Start
The use of a soft-start procedure is
believed to provide additional
protection to marine mammals by
providing warning and/or giving marine
mammals a chance to leave the area
prior to the impact hammer operating at
full capacity. For impact pile driving,
contractors will be required to provide
an initial set of strikes from the hammer
at 40 percent energy, each strike
followed by no less than a 30-second
waiting period. This procedure will be
conducted a total of three times before
impact pile driving begins. This soft
start procedure must be implemented at
the start of a day’s impact pile driving
and at any time following cessation of
impact driving of 30 minutes or greater.
Soft start is not required during
vibratory pile driving/removal or
drilling activities.
Pre-Activity Monitoring
Prior to the start of daily in-water
construction activity, or whenever a
break in pile driving or drilling of 30
minutes or longer occurs, the observer
will observe the shutdown and
monitoring zones for a period of 30
minutes. The shutdown zone will be
cleared when a marine mammal has not
been observed within the zone for that
30-minute period. A determination that
the shutdown zone is clear must be
made during a period of good visibility
(i.e., the entire shutdown zone and
surrounding waters must be visible to
the naked eye). If a marine mammal is
observed within the shutdown zone, a
soft-start cannot proceed until the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
animal has left the zone or has not been
observed for 15 minutes. If the
monitoring zone has been observed for
30 minutes and non-permitted species
are not present within the zone, soft
start procedures can commence and
work can continue even if visibility
becomes impaired within the
monitoring zone. When a marine
mammal permitted for Level B take is
present in the monitoring zone, pile
driving, pile removal, and drilling
activities may begin and Level B take
will be recorded. As stated above, if the
entire Level B zone is not visible at the
start of construction, piling or drilling
activities can begin. If work ceases for
more than 30 minutes, the pre-activity
monitoring of both the monitoring zone
and shutdown zone will commence.
Based on our evaluation of the
applicant’s proposed measures, as well
as other measures considered by NMFS,
NMFS has preliminarily determined
that the proposed mitigation measures
provide the means effecting the least
practicable impact on the affected
species or stocks and their habitat,
paying particular attention to rookeries,
mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance.
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA for an
activity, Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the
MMPA states that NMFS must set forth,
requirements pertaining to the
monitoring and reporting of such taking.
The MMPA implementing regulations at
50 CFR 216.104(a)(13) indicate that
requests for authorizations must include
the suggested means of accomplishing
the necessary monitoring and reporting
that will result in increased knowledge
of the species and of the level of taking
or impacts on populations of marine
mammals that are expected to be
present in the proposed action area.
Effective reporting is critical both to
compliance as well as ensuring that the
most value is obtained from the required
monitoring.
Monitoring and reporting
requirements prescribed by NMFS
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
should contribute to improved
understanding of one or more of the
following:
• Occurrence of marine mammal
species or stocks in the area in which
take is anticipated (e.g., presence,
abundance, distribution, density);
• Nature, scope, or context of likely
marine mammal exposure to potential
stressors/impacts (individual or
cumulative, acute or chronic), through
better understanding of: (1) Action or
environment (e.g., source
characterization, propagation, ambient
noise); (2) affected species (e.g., life
history, dive patterns); (3) co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the
action; or (4) biological or behavioral
context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or
feeding areas);
• Individual marine mammal
responses (behavioral or physiological)
to acoustic stressors (acute, chronic, or
cumulative), other stressors, or
cumulative impacts from multiple
stressors;
• How anticipated responses to
stressors impact either: (1) Long-term
fitness and survival of individual
marine mammals; or (2) populations,
species, or stocks;
• Effects on marine mammal habitat
(e.g., marine mammal prey species,
acoustic habitat, or other important
physical components of marine
mammal habitat); and
• Mitigation and monitoring
effectiveness.
Hydroacoustic Monitoring
The Port recognizes in their
application the need to implement a
sound monitoring plan (SMP) as
required by the Regional NMFS and
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
programmatic review for pile driving
activities in San Francisco Bay. The Port
indicates that this SMP will recommend
sound monitoring stations at 10 m, 100
m, and 300 m to monitor ambient noise
conditions in the area. NMFS feels that
ambient noise measurements are highly
specific to the time and place they were
taken, and therefore might have limited
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42486
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
use to future projects. However, there
are few source level measurements for
down the hole drilling activities, as
shown by the use of Alaska DOT proxy
data in this IHA. NMFS feels that
rigorous hydroacoustic monitoring of
source level for the down the hole
drilling activity will be more beneficial
for future projects in this region and
others. While NMFS is not requiring
these source level measurements, if the
Port were already planning to conduct
measurements, we recommend focusing
on source level verification and could
offer guidance on its implementation.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Visual Monitoring
Monitoring would be conducted 30
minutes before, during, and 30 minutes
after all pile driving/removal and
drilling activities. In addition, observers
shall record all incidents of marine
mammal occurrence, regardless of
distance from activity, and shall
document any behavioral reactions in
concert with distance from piles being
driven, removed, or pile holes being
drilled. Pile driving and drilling
activities include the time to install,
remove, or drill a hole for a single pile
or series of piles, as long as the time
elapsed between uses of the pile driving
equipment is no more than thirty
minutes.
Monitoring will be conducted by
NMFS approved Protected Species
Observers (PSOs). There will be at least
two PSOs, but this number could be
higher, depending on the type of pile
driving/drilling and size of pile, which
determines the size of the harassment
zones. At least two land-based PSOs
will monitor during all pile driving/
removal and drilling activities.
PSOs shall scan the waters using
binoculars, and/or spotting scopes, and
shall use a handheld GPS or rangefinder device to verify the distance to
each sighting from the project site. All
PSOs shall be trained in marine
mammal identification and behaviors
and are required to have no other
project-related tasks while conducting
monitoring. In addition, monitoring
shall be conducted by qualified
observers, who shall be placed at the
best vantage point(s) practicable to
monitor for marine mammals and
implement shutdown/delay procedures
when applicable by calling for the
shutdown to the hammer operator.
Qualified observers are trained and/or
experienced professionals, with the
following minimum qualifications:
i. At least one PSO must have prior
experience working as a marine
mammal observer during construction
activities;
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
• Independent observers (i.e., not
construction personnel);
ii. Other PSOs may substitute
education (degree in biological science
or related field) or training for
experience;
iii. Where a team of three or more
PSOs are required, a lead observer or
monitoring coordinator shall be
designated. The lead observer must have
prior experience working as a marine
mammal observer during construction;
iv. The Port of San Francisco shall
submit PSO CVs for approval by NMFS;
The Port of San Francisco shall ensure
that observers have the following
additional qualifications:
• Visual acuity in both eyes
(correction is permissible) sufficient for
discernment of moving targets at the
water’s surface with ability to estimate
target size and distance; use of
binoculars may be necessary to correctly
identify the target;
• Ability to conduct field
observations and collect data according
to assigned protocols;
• Experience or training in the field
identification of marine mammals,
including the identification of
behaviors;
• Writing skills sufficient to prepare a
report of observations including but not
limited to the number and species of
marine mammals observed; dates and
times when in-water construction
activities were conducted; dates, times,
and reason for implementation of
mitigation (or why mitigation was not
implemented when required); and
marine mammal behavior;
• Ability to communicate orally, by
radio or in person, with project
personnel to provide real-time
information on marine mammals
observed in the area as necessary; and
• Sufficient training, orientation, or
experience with the construction
operations to provide for personal safety
during observations.
The Port of San Francisco shall
submit a draft report to NMFS not later
than 90 days following the end of
construction activities. The Port of San
Francisco shall provide a final report
within 30 days following resolution of
NMFS’ comments on the draft report.
Reports shall contain, at minimum, the
following:
• Date and time that monitored
activity begins and ends for each day
conducted (monitoring period);
• Construction activities occurring
during each daily observation period,
including how many and what type of
piles driven;
• Deviation from initial proposal in
pile numbers, pile types, average
driving times, etc.;
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
• Weather parameters in each
monitoring period (e.g., wind speed,
percent cloud cover, visibility);
• Water conditions in each
monitoring period (e.g., sea state, tide
state);
• Extrapolated estimates of the total
observed Level B harassment takes
based on the percentage of the Level B
harassment zone that was not visible or
was not monitored
• For each marine mammal sighting:
Æ Species, numbers, and, if possible,
sex and age class of marine mammals;
Æ Description of any observable
marine mammal behavior patterns,
including bearing and direction of travel
and distance from pile driving activity;
Æ Location and distance from pile
driving activities to marine mammals
and distance from the marine mammals
to the observation point;
Æ Estimated amount of time that the
animals remained in the Level B
harassment zone;
Æ Description of implementation of
mitigation measures within each
monitoring period (e.g., shutdown or
delay);
Æ Other human activity in the area
within each monitoring period; and
Æ A summary of the following:
D Total number of individuals of each
species detected within the monitoring
zone, and estimated as taken if
correction factor appropriate;
D Total number of individuals of each
species detected within the Level A
harassment zone and the average
amount of time that they remained in
that zone; and
D Daily average number of individuals
of each species (differentiated by month
as appropriate) detected within the
monitoring zone, and estimated as
taken, if appropriate.
Negligible Impact Analysis and
Determination
NMFS has defined negligible impact
as an impact resulting from the
specified activity that cannot be
reasonably expected to, and is not
reasonably likely to, adversely affect the
species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival
(50 CFR 216.103). A negligible impact
finding is based on the lack of likely
adverse effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival (i.e., populationlevel effects). An estimate of the number
of takes alone is not enough information
on which to base an impact
determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of
marine mammals that might be ‘‘taken’’
through harassment, NMFS considers
other factors, such as the likely nature
of any responses (e.g., intensity,
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
duration), the context of any responses
(e.g., critical reproductive time or
location, migration), as well as effects
on habitat, and the likely effectiveness
of the mitigation. We also assess the
number, intensity, and context of
estimated takes by evaluating this
information relative to population
status. Consistent with the 1989
preamble for NMFS’s implementing
regulations (54 FR 40338; September 29,
1989), the impacts from other past and
ongoing anthropogenic activities are
incorporated into this analysis via their
impacts on the environmental baseline
(e.g., as reflected in the regulatory status
of the species, population size and
growth rate where known, ongoing
sources of human-caused mortality, or
ambient noise levels).
As stated in the mitigation section,
bubble curtains will be used and
shutdown zones that encompass the
area in which Level A harassment might
be expected to occur will be
implemented. As a result, no Level A
take is expected nor authorized for this
activity. Exposures to elevated sound
levels produced during pile driving
activities may cause behavioral
responses by an animal, but they are
expected to be mild and temporary.
Effects on individuals that are taken by
Level B harassment, on the basis of
reports in the literature as well as
monitoring from other similar activities,
will likely be limited to reactions such
as increased swimming speeds,
increased surfacing time, or decreased
foraging (if such activity were occurring)
(e.g., Thorson and Reyff, 2006; Lerma,
2014). Most likely, individuals will
simply move away from the sound
source and be temporarily displaced
from the areas of pile driving, although
even this reaction has been observed
primarily only in association with
impact pile driving. These reactions and
behavioral changes are expected to
subside quickly when the exposures
cease. Within the project area, there are
no critical habitats or other biologically
important areas (Calambokidis et al.,
2015). The area is an active commercial
port, and while harbor seals, California
sea lions, and other marine mammals
may be present, the area is not an
established rookery or breeding ground
for local populations.
During all impact driving,
implementation of soft start procedures,
the use of a bubble curtain, and
monitoring of established shutdown
zones will be required. Given sufficient
notice through use of soft start (for
impact driving), marine mammals are
expected to move away from an
irritating sound source prior to it
becoming potentially injurious. In
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
addition, PSOs will be stationed within
the action area whenever pile driving/
removal and drilling operations are
underway. Depending on the activity,
The Port of San Francisco will employ
the use of at least two PSOs to ensure
all monitoring and shutdown zones are
properly observed.
Although the Mission Bay Ferry and
Water Taxi Landing Project would have
some permanent removal of habitat
available to marine mammals, the area
lost would negligible. Construction of
the MBFL and WTL structures and
dredging for the project will result in
the disturbance of up to approximately
8.4 acres of predominantly fine-grained
sediment and the associated benthic
infaunal community. Total habitat
disturbed from the project activities is
estimated at 0.000071 percent of the
total South San Francisco Bay subtidal
habitat available (NOAA 2007). This is
a relatively small fraction of area
relative to the total available habitat for
foraging and transit for marine
mammals. In addition, to minimize
impacts, in-water construction will be
limited to locally established
environmental work windows between
June and November.
Overall, impacts to marine mammals
and prey species due to the Mission Bay
Ferry and Water Taxi Landing Project
are expected to be minor and temporary.
The area impacted by the project is very
small compared to the available habitat
around San Francisco Bay. The most
likely impact to prey will be temporary
behavioral avoidance of the immediate
area. During pile driving and drilling, it
is expected that fish and marine
mammals would temporarily move to
nearby locations and return to the area
following cessation of in-water
construction activities. Therefore,
indirect effects on marine mammal prey
during the construction are not expected
to be substantial.
In summary and as described above,
the following factors primarily support
our determination that the impacts
resulting from this activity are not
expected to adversely affect the species
or stock through effects on annual rates
of recruitment or survival:
• Mortality is not anticipated or
authorized;
• Minimal impacts to marine
mammal habitat are expected;
• Bubble curtain and other sound
attenuating devices are used during
impact pile driving will lessen the
amount of behavioral disturbance and
contribute to the alleviation of the
likelihood of injury;
• Impacts are not occurring in
rookeries, or known areas or features of
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42487
special significance for foraging or
reproduction in the project area;
• Anticipated incidents of Level B
harassment consist of, at worst,
temporary modifications in behavior;
and
• Required mitigation measures (i.e.
shutdown zones) are expected to be
effective in reducing the effects of the
specified activity.
Based on the analysis contained
herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals
and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the
monitoring and mitigation measures,
NMFS preliminarily finds that the total
marine mammal take from the activity
will have a negligible impact on all
affected marine mammal species or
stocks.
Small Numbers
As noted above, only small numbers
of incidental take may be authorized
under Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA
for specified activities other than
military readiness activities. The MMPA
does not define small numbers and so,
in practice, where estimated numbers
are available, NMFS compares the
number of individuals taken to the most
appropriate estimation of abundance of
the relevant species or stock in our
determination of whether an
authorization is limited to small
numbers of marine mammals.
Additionally, other qualitative factors
may be considered in the analysis, such
as the temporal or spatial scale of the
activities.
Take for all species authorized except
harbor seal is less than five percent of
their respective stock abundance. For
harbor seal, the authorized take is less
than 10 percent of the stock abundance.
Based on this and the analysis
contained herein of the proposed
activity (including the proposed
mitigation and monitoring measures)
and the anticipated take of marine
mammals, NMFS preliminarily finds
that small numbers of marine mammals
will be taken relative to the population
size of the affected species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis
and Determination
There are no relevant subsistence uses
of the affected marine mammal stocks or
species implicated by this action.
Therefore, NMFS has determined that
the total taking of affected species or
stocks would not have an unmitigable
adverse impact on the availability of
such species or stocks for taking for
subsistence purposes.
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42488
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
No incidental take of ESA-listed
species is proposed for authorization or
expected to result from this activity.
Therefore, NMFS has determined that
formal consultation under section 7 of
the ESA is not required for this action.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary
determinations, NMFS proposes to issue
an IHA to the Port of San Francisco for
conducting pile driving/removal and
drilling in San Francisco Bay from June
1, 2019 to May 31, 2020, provided the
previously mentioned mitigation,
monitoring, and reporting requirements
are incorporated. This section contains
a draft of the IHA itself. The wording
contained in this section is proposed for
inclusion in the IHA (if issued).
1. This Incidental Harassment
Authorization (IHA) is valid from June
1, 2019, to May 31, 2020.
2. This IHA is valid only for impact
pile driving, vibratory pile driving,
vibratory pile removal, and drilling
activities associated with the
construction of the Mission Bay Ferry
and Water Taxi Landing Project in San
Francisco Bay, California
3. General Conditions
(a) A copy of this IHA must be in the
possession of the Port of San Francisco,
its designees, and work crew personnel
operating under the authority of this
IHA;
(b) The species authorized for taking
are gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus),
bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus),
harbor porpoise (Phocoena phocoena),
California sea lion (Zalophus
californianus), northern fur seal
(Callorhinus ursinus), Pacific harbor
seal (Phoca vitulina richardii), and
northern elephant seal (Mirounga
angustirostris);
(c) The taking, by Level B harassment
only, is limited to the species listed in
condition 3(b). See Table 9 for numbers
of take authorized;
(d) The taking by serious injury or
death of any of the species listed in
condition 3(b) of the Authorization or
any taking of any other species of
marine mammal is prohibited and may
result in the modification, suspension,
or revocation of this IHA;
(e) The Port of San Francisco must
conduct briefings between construction
supervisors and crews and marine
mammal monitoring team prior to the
start of all pile driving, pile removal,
and drilling, and when new personnel
join the work, in order to explain
responsibilities, communication
procedures, marine mammal monitoring
protocol, and operational procedures;
and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
(f) Pile driving and drilling activities
authorized under this IHA may only
occur during daylight hours.
4. Mitigation Measures
The holder of this Authorization is
required to implement the following
mitigation measures:
(a) For all pile driving/removal,
drilling, and in-water heavy machinery
work, the Port of San Francisco must
implement a shutdown zone around the
pile or work zone. If a marine mammal
comes within or approaches the
shutdown zone, such operations must
cease. See Table 10 for minimum radial
distances required for shutdown zones;
(b) After a shutdown occurs, impact
pile driving, vibratory piling driving/
removal, and/or drilling can only begin
after the animal is observed leaving the
shutdown zone or has not been
observed for 15 minutes;
(c) The Port of San Francisco must use
sound attenuation devices (i.e. cushion
block, and bubble curtain) during all
impact pile driving and a caisson sleeve
during drilling. The Port of San
Francisco must implement the following
bubble curtain performance standards:
(1) The bubble curtain must distribute
air bubbles around 100 percent of the
piling perimeter for the full depth of the
water column;
(2) The lowest bubble ring must be in
contact with the mudline for the full
circumference of the ring, and the
weights attached to the bottom ring
must ensure 100 percent mudline
contact. No parts of the ring or other
objects shall prevent full mudline
contact; and
(3) The selected contractor must
ensure that personnel are trained in the
proper balancing of air flow to the
bubblers and must require that
construction contractors submit an
inspection/performance report for
approval by the Port within 72 hours
following the performance test.
Corrections to the attenuation device to
meet the performance standards must
occur prior to impact driving;
(d) The Port of San Francisco must
use a soft-start procedure for impact pile
driving. During a soft start, The Port of
San Francisco is required to provide an
initial set of three strikes from the
impact hammer at 40 percent energy,
followed by a 30-second waiting period,
then two subsequent 3-strike sets. This
soft-start must be applied prior to
beginning pile driving activities each
day or when impact pile driving
hammers have been idle for more than
30 minutes;
(e) If a species enters or approaches
the Level B harassment zone and that
species is either not authorized for take
or its authorized takes are met, pile
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
driving and removal activities must shut
down immediately using delay and
shut-down procedures; and
(f) The Port of San Francisco must
establish monitoring locations as
described below.
5. Monitoring
The holder of this Authorization is
required to conduct marine mammal
monitoring during all pile driving/
removal and drilling activities.
Monitoring and reporting must be
conducted in accordance with the
Monitoring Plan as described below.
(a) The Port of San Francisco must
monitor the Level B harassment zones
and shutdown zones shown in Tables
10 and 11 during all pile driving/
removal and drilling activities.
Monitoring efforts in the Level B
harassment zone can be concentrated in
a subset of the zone if it is not feasible
to observe the entire zone.
(b) If waters exceed a sea-state which
restricts the observers’ ability to make
observations within the marine mammal
shutdown zone, pile installation/
removal and drilling must cease. Pile
driving and/or drilling must not be
initiated or continue until the entire
largest shutdown zone for the activity is
visible.
(c) Prior to the start of daily in-water
construction activity, or whenever a
break in pile driving/removal and/or
drilling of 30 minutes or longer occurs,
the PSOs must observe the shutdown
and monitoring zones for a period of 30
minutes before construction activities
can begin.
(d) If the shutdown zones have been
observed to be clear of marine mammals
for 30 minutes, in-water construction
can commence and work can continue
even if visibility becomes impaired
within the Level B harassment zone.
(e) Monitoring must be conducted by
qualified PSOs, with minimum
qualifications as described previously in
the Monitoring and Reporting section of
the proposed Federal Notice. PSO
requirements include:
(i) At least two PSOs must be on site
to actively observe the shutdown and
disturbance zones during all pile
driving, removal, and drilling;
(ii) Observers must use their naked
eye with the aid of binoculars, and/or a
spotting scope during all pile driving
and extraction activities;
(iii) All PSOs must be positioned in
the best vantage point to have an
unobstructed view of all water within
the shutdown zone and as much of the
Level B harassment zone as possible for
pile driving/removal and/or drilling;
(iv) Observers must be independent
(i.e., not construction personnel);
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
(v) At least one PSO must have prior
experience working as a marine
mammal observer during construction
activities;
(vi) (Other PSOs may substitute
education (degree in biological science
or related field) or training for
experience;
(vii) Where a team of three or more
PSOs are required, a lead observer or
monitoring coordinator shall be
designated. The lead observer must have
prior experience working as a marine
mammal observer during construction;
(viii) The Port of San Francisco shall
submit PSO CVs for approval by NMFS;
(f) Marine mammal location must be
determined using a rangefinder and a
GPS or compass;
(g) Post-construction monitoring must
be conducted for 30 minutes beyond the
cessation of piling and drilling activities
at end of day.
6. Reporting
The holder of this Authorization is
required to:
(a) Submit a draft report on all
monitoring conducted under the IHA
within 90 calendar days of the
completion of marine mammal
monitoring. This report must detail the
monitoring protocol, summarize the
data recorded during monitoring, and
estimate the number of marine
mammals that may have been harassed,
including the total number extrapolated
from observed animals across the
entirety of relevant monitoring zones.
Given that the entire Level B harassment
zone may not be readily observable,
takes must be recorded and extrapolated
based upon the amount of total observed
takes and the percentage of the Level B
harassment zone that was not visible.
A final report must be prepared and
submitted within 30 days following
resolution of comments on the draft
report from NMFS. This report must
contain the following:
(i) Date and time a monitored activity
begins or ends;
(ii) Construction activities occurring
during each observation period;
(iii) Record of implementation of
shutdowns, including the distance of
animals to the pile and description of
specific actions that ensued and
resulting behavior of the animal, if any;
(iv) An estimated total take
extrapolated from the number of marine
mammals observed during the course of
construction activities, if necessary.
(v) Deviation from initial proposal in
pile numbers, pile types, average
driving times, etc.;
(vi) Weather parameters (e.g., percent
cover, visibility);
(vii) Water conditions (e.g., sea state,
tide state);
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
(viii) Species, numbers, and, if
possible, sex and age class of marine
mammals;
(ix) Description of any observable
marine mammal behavior patterns,
(x) Distance from pile driving
activities to marine mammals and
distance from the marine mammals to
the observation point;
(x) Locations of all marine mammal
observations; and
(xi) Other human activity in the area.
(b) Reporting injured or dead marine
mammals:
(i) In the unanticipated event that the
specified activity clearly causes the take
of a marine mammal in a manner
prohibited by this IHA, such as an
injury (Level A harassment), serious
injury, or mortality, The Port of San
Francisco must immediately cease the
specified activities and report the
incident to the Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, and the West Coast
Stranding Coordinator, NMFS. The
report must include the following
information:
1. Time and date of the incident;
2. Description of the incident;
3. Environmental conditions (e.g.,
wind speed and direction, Beaufort sea
state, cloud cover, and visibility);
4. Description of all marine mammal
observations and active sound source
use in the 24 hours preceding the
incident;
5. Species identification or
description of the animal(s) involved;
6. Fate of the animal(s); and
7. Photographs or video footage of the
animal(s).
Activities must not resume until
NMFS is able to review the
circumstances of the prohibited take.
NMFS will work with the Port of San
Francisco to determine what measures
are necessary to minimize the likelihood
of further prohibited take and ensure
MMPA compliance. The Port of San
Francisco may not resume their
activities until notified by NMFS;
(i) In the event that the Port of San
Francisco discovers an injured or dead
marine mammal, and the lead observer
determines that the cause of the injury
or death is unknown and the death is
relatively recent (e.g., in less than a
moderate state of decomposition), the
Port of San Francisco must immediately
report the incident to the Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, and the
West Coast Stranding Coordinator,
NMFS;
(ii) The report must include the same
information identified in 6(b)(i) of this
IHA. Activities may continue while
NMFS reviews the circumstances of the
incident. NMFS will work with the Port
of San Francisco to determine whether
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
42489
additional mitigation measures or
modifications to the activities are
appropriate;
(iii) In the event that the Port of San
Francisco discovers an injured or dead
marine mammal, and the lead observer
determines that the injury or death is
not associated with or related to the
activities authorized in the IHA (e.g.,
previously wounded animal, carcass
with moderate to advanced
decomposition, or scavenger damage),
the Port of San Francisco must report
the incident to the Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, and the West Coast
Stranding Coordinator, NMFS, within
24 hours of the discovery. The Port of
San Francisco must provide
photographs or video footage or other
documentation of the stranded animal
sighting to NMFS;
7. This Authorization may be
modified, suspended or withdrawn if
the holder fails to abide by the
conditions prescribed herein, or if
NMFS determines the authorized taking
is having more than a negligible impact
on the species or stock of affected
marine mammals.
Request for Public Comments
We request comment on our analyses,
the proposed authorization, the Port’s
potential sound source verification
efforts, and any other aspect of this
Notice of Proposed IHA for the
proposed action. We also request
comment on the potential for renewal of
this proposed IHA as described in the
paragraph below. Please include with
your comments any supporting data or
literature citations to help inform our
final decision on the request for MMPA
authorization.
On a case-by-case basis, NMFS may
issue a second one-year IHA without
additional notice when (1) another year
of identical or nearly identical activities
as described in the Specified Activities
section is planned or (2) the activities
would not be completed by the time the
IHA expires and a second IHA would
allow for completion of the activities
beyond that described in the Dates and
Duration section, provided all of the
following conditions are met:
• A request for renewal is received no
later than 60 days prior to expiration of
the current IHA;
• The request for renewal must
include the following:
(1) An explanation that the activities
to be conducted beyond the initial dates
either are identical to the previously
analyzed activities or include changes
so minor (e.g., reduction in pile size)
that the changes do not affect the
previous analyses, take estimates, or
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
42490
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 22, 2018 / Notices
mitigation and monitoring
requirements; and
(2) A preliminary monitoring report
showing the results of the required
monitoring to date and an explanation
showing that the monitoring results do
not indicate impacts of a scale or nature
not previously analyzed or authorized;
• Upon review of the request for
renewal, the status of the affected
species or stocks, and any other
pertinent information, NMFS
determines that there are no more than
minor changes in the activities, the
mitigation and monitoring measures
remain the same and appropriate, and
the original findings remain valid.
Dated: August 16, 2018.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
Public Comment
Public comment letters will be
accepted and should be submitted either
electronically to Elizabeth Figus,
Council staff: Elizabeth.figus@noaa.gov
or through the mail: North Pacific
Fishery Management Council, 605 W
4th Ave., Suite 306, Anchorage, AK
99501–2252. In-person oral public
testimony will be accepted at the
discretion of the chair.
Special Accommodations
The meeting is physically accessible
to people with disabilities. Requests for
sign language interpretation or other
auxiliary aids should be directed to
Shannon Gleason at (907) 271–2809 at
least 7 working days prior to the
meeting date.
Dated: August 17, 2018.
Tracey L. Thompson,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–18056 Filed 8–21–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
[FR Doc. 2018–18118 Filed 8–21–18; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
RIN 0648–XG432
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council; Public Meeting
RIN 0648–XG003
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of telephonic meeting.
AGENCY:
The North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council)
Observer Advisory Committee Subgroup
will meet September 5, 2018.
DATES: The meeting will be held on
Wednesday, September 5, 2018, from
1 p.m. to 2:30 p.m.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held
telephonically. Teleconference line:
(907) 271–2896.
Council address: North Pacific
Fishery Management Council, 605 W
4th Ave., Suite 306, Anchorage, AK
99501–2252; telephone: (907) 271–2809.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Elizabeth Figus, Council staff;
telephone: (907) 271–2809.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1
SUMMARY:
Agenda
The agenda will include: A discussion
of the Observer Program Fee Analysis
developments since June 2018,
including an outline, alternatives,
monitoring objectives, and discussion of
analysis methods.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:34 Aug 21, 2018
Jkt 244001
Pacific Island Fisheries; Marine
Conservation Plan for American
Samoa; Western Pacific Sustainable
Fisheries Fund
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of agency decision.
AGENCY:
NMFS announces approval of
a marine conservation plan (MCP) for
American Samoa.
DATES: This agency decision is effective
from July 25, 2018, through July 24,
2021.
ADDRESSES: You may obtain a copy of
the MCP, identified by NOAA–NMFS–
2018–0014, from the Federal eRulemaking Portal, https://
www.regulations.gov/#!
docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20180014, or from the Western Pacific
Fishery Management Council (Council),
1164 Bishop St., Suite 1400, Honolulu,
HI 96813, tel 808–522–8200, https://
www.wpcouncil.org.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gabriel Forrester, Sustainable Fisheries,
NMFS Pacific Island Regional Office,
808–725–5179.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
204(e) of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act) authorizes the
Secretary of State, with the concurrence
of the Secretary of Commerce
(Secretary) and in consultation with the
Council, to negotiate and enter into a
Pacific Insular Area fishery agreement
(PIAFA). A PIAFA would allow foreign
fishing within the U.S. Exclusive
Economic Zone (EEZ) adjacent to
American Samoa, Guam, or the
Northern Mariana Islands. The Governor
of the Pacific Insular Area to which the
PIAFA applies must request the PIAFA.
The Secretary of State may negotiate
and enter the PIAFA after consultation
with, and concurrence of, the applicable
Governor.
Before entering the PIAFA, the
applicable Governor, with concurrence
of the Council, must develop and
submit to the Secretary a 3-year MCP
providing details on uses for and funds
collected by the Secretary for MCP
review and approval. NMFS is the
designee of the Secretary for MCP
review and approval. The MagnusonStevens Act requires payments received
under a PIAFA to be deposited into the
United States Treasury and then
conveyed to the Treasury of the Pacific
Insular Area for which funds were
collected.
In the case of violations by foreign
fishing vessels in the EEZ around any
Pacific Insular Area, amounts received
by the Secretary attributable to fines and
penalties imposed under the MagnusonStevens Act, including sums collected
from the forfeiture and disposition or
sale of property seized subject to its
authority, shall be deposited into the
Treasury of the Pacific Insular Area
adjacent to the EEZ in which the
violation occurred, after direct costs of
the enforcement action are subtracted.
The Pacific Insular Area government
may use funds deposited into the
treasury of the Pacific Insular Area for
fisheries enforcement and for
implementation of an MCP.
Federal regulations at 50 CFR 665.819
authorize NMFS to specify catch limits
of longline-caught bigeye tuna for U.S.
territories. NMFS may also authorize
each territory to allocate a portion of
that limit to U.S. longline fishing vessels
that are permitted to fish under the
Fishery Ecosystem Plan for Pelagic
Fisheries of the Western Pacific (FEP).
Payments collected under specified
fishing agreements are deposited into
the Western Pacific Sustainable
Fisheries Fund, and any funds
attributable to a particular Fisheries
Fund, and any funds attributable to a
particular territory may be used only for
implementation of that territory’s MCP.
E:\FR\FM\22AUN1.SGM
22AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 163 (Wednesday, August 22, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 42465-42490]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-18056]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XG105
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities;
Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to the Mission Bay Ferry and Water
Taxi Landing Project in San Francisco Bay, California
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental harassment authorization; request
for comments on proposed authorization and possible renewal.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS has received a request from the Port of San Francisco for
authorization to take marine mammals incidental to the Mission Bay
Ferry and Water Taxi Landing Project in San Francisco Bay, California.
Pursuant to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is requesting
comments on its proposal to issue an incidental harassment
authorization (IHA) to incidentally take marine mammals during the
specified activities. NMFS is also requesting comments on a possible
one-year renewal that could be issued under certain circumstances and
if all requirements are met, as described in Request for Public
Comments at the end of this notice. NMFS will consider public comments
prior to making any final decision on the issuance of the requested
MMPA authorization and agency responses will be summarized in the final
notice of our decision.
DATES: Comments and information must be received no later than
September 21, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be addressed to Jolie Harrison, Chief,
Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service. Physical comments should be sent to
1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 and electronic comments
should be sent to [email protected].
Instructions: NMFS is not responsible for comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or individual, or received after the
end of the comment period. Comments received electronically, including
all attachments, must not exceed a 25-megabyte file size. Attachments
to electronic comments will be accepted in Microsoft Word or Excel or
Adobe PDF file formats only. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted online at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/node/23111 without change. All personal
identifying information (e.g., name, address) voluntarily submitted by
the commenter may be publicly accessible. Do not submit confidential
business information or otherwise sensitive or protected information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gray Redding, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401. Electronic copies of the application
and supporting documents, as well as a list of the references cited in
this document, may be obtained online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/incidental-take-authorizations-construction-activities. In case of problems
accessing these documents, please call the contact listed above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The MMPA prohibits the ``take'' of marine mammals, with certain
exceptions. Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361
et seq.) direct the Secretary of Commerce (as delegated to NMFS) to
allow, upon request, the incidental, but not intentional, taking of
small numbers of marine mammals by U.S. citizens who engage in a
specified activity (other than commercial fishing) within a specified
geographical region if certain findings are made and either regulations
are issued or, if the taking is limited to harassment, a notice of a
proposed incidental take authorization may be provided to the public
for review.
Authorization for incidental takings shall be granted if NMFS finds
that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species or
stock(s) and will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for taking for subsistence uses
(where relevant). Further, NMFS must prescribe the permissible methods
of taking and other ``means of effecting the least practicable
[adverse] impact'' on the affected species or stocks and their habitat,
paying particular attention to rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of
similar significance, and on the availability of such species or stocks
for taking for certain subsistence uses (referred to in shorthand as
``mitigation''); and requirements pertaining to the mitigation,
monitoring and reporting of such takings are set forth. The definitions
of all applicable MMPA statutory terms cited above are included in the
relevant sections below.
[[Page 42466]]
National Environmental Policy Act
To comply with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA;
42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and NOAA Administrative Order (NAO) 216-6A,
NMFS must review our proposed action (i.e., the issuance of an
incidental harassment authorization) with respect to potential impacts
on the human environment.
This action is consistent with categories of activities identified
in Categorical Exclusion B4 (incidental harassment authorizations with
no anticipated serious injury or mortality) of the Companion Manual for
NOAA Administrative Order 216-6A, which do not individually or
cumulatively have the potential for significant impacts on the quality
of the human environment and for which we have not identified any
extraordinary circumstances that would preclude this categorical
exclusion. Accordingly, NMFS has preliminarily determined that the
issuance of the proposed IHA qualifies to be categorically excluded
from further NEPA review.
We will review all comments submitted in response to this notice
prior to concluding our NEPA process or making a final decision on the
IHA request.
Summary of Request
On November 2, 2017, NMFS received a request from the Port of San
Francisco for an IHA to take marine mammals incidental to pile driving
and drilling in San Francisco Bay. NMFS determined that a revised
version of the Port's application was adequate and complete on June 22,
2018. The Port of San Francisco's request is for take of seven species
of marine mammals by Level B harassment only. Neither the Port of San
Francisco nor NMFS expects serious injury or mortality to result from
this activity and, therefore, an IHA is appropriate.
Description of Proposed Activity
Overview
The port of San Francisco proposes to construct the Mission Bay
Ferry Landing (MBFL) and Water Taxi Landing (WTL) on San Francisco Bay,
within the Port of San Francisco's Southern Waterfront in the Mission
Bay/Central Waterfront area (see Figure 1 of IHA Application). The
project's proposed activities that have the potential to take marine
mammals include vibratory and impact pile driving, vibratory pile
removal, and down the hole drilling. In addition, the project will
include dredging, however authorization of take from this activity is
neither requested nor proposed for authorization.
The Mission Bay Ferry Landing, a single[hyphen]float,
two[hyphen]berth ferry landing will provide critical regional ferry
service to and from the Mission Bay neighborhood, one of the fastest
growing neighborhoods in San Francisco, as well as the Dogpatch,
Potrero Hill, Pier 70, and the Central Waterfront neighborhoods. The
separate single float, two[hyphen]berth Water Taxi Landing will provide
local water taxi access to the Mission Bay area and surrounding
neighborhoods.
Dates and Duration
The Port of San Francisco's construction, including dredging,
vibratory and impact pile driving, and drilling for installation of the
pier and floating docks will occur from June through November of 2019
(environment working windows for dredging in this region of the San
Francisco Bay established by the San Francisco Bay Long Term Management
Strategy (LTMS Agencies, 2001). The maximum number of construction days
possible, including dredging and all other activities, is 55 days. The
maximum total number of days for pile installation and removal are 15
days.
Specific Geographic Region
As stated, the project is located in San Francisco Bay within the
Port of San Francisco's Southern Waterfront in the Mission Bay/Central
Waterfront area. The specific geographic location for the project is
provided in Figures 1 and 2 of the IHA Application. The project site is
approximately three kilometers south of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay
Bridge, on the western side of San Francisco Bay in the Central Basin.
The nearby waterfront is an active recreational and commercial port and
shipyard.
Detailed Description of Specific Activity
Demolition
Based on preliminary bathymetric surveys and historic information,
The Port anticipates that buried remnants of concrete and wood debris
from Pier 64-66 apron may be encountered within the Ferry Landing
dredge boundary. All debris encountered during dredging operations will
be removed and disposed of at an approved upland location.
In addition, existing piles will be pulled with a cable choker or
removed with a vibratory hammer and every effort will be made to remove
the entire pile length. If it is necessary to utilize vibratory hammer
to remove a pile the process will consist of approximately 1-2 minutes
of initial vibratory use while pulling the pile up to loosen it from
the sediment. The barge/crane then moves to the next pile to loosen.
The operator will do this for five to eight piles then remove the
vibratory driver and go back to dead pull the loosened piles and place
them on a debris barge for disposal at a permitted facility. The
vibratory use is minimal to just loosen the pile. Noise generated from
the operation of the vibratory hammer is expected to result in the
behavioral disturbance of marine mammals and, therefore, take
authorization is requested, and accounted for in the ``Take Calculation
and Estimation'' section below.
Dredging
Dredging of approximately 129,374 cubic yards will be conducted to
a depth of -15 feet (ft) MLLW +2 ft of overdepth within the Ferry
Landing dredge boundary, and to a depth of -8ft MLLW +1 ft overdepth
within the Water Taxi Landing dredge boundary.
Best Management Practices (BMPs) will be detailed in a Dredge
Operations Plan (DOP) submitted to the regulatory agencies for approval
before dredging begins, and implemented. Dredging will be performed
from a barge[hyphen]mounted crane with a clam shell bucket. Sediment
will be transferred into adjacent barges for transport to permitted
placement site(s). All debris encountered during dredging operations
will be removed and disposed of at an approved upland location. Noise
measurements of dredging activities are rare in the literature, but
dredging is considered to be a low-impact activity for marine mammals,
producing non-pulsed sound and being substantially quieter in terms of
acoustic energy output than sources such as seismic airguns and impact
pile driving. Noise produced by dredging operations has been compared
to that produced by a commercial vessel travelling at modest speed
(Robinson et al., 2011). Further discussion of dredging sound
production may be found in the literature (e.g., Richardson et al.,
1995, Nedwell et al., 2008, Parvin et al., 2008, Ainslie et al., 2009).
Generally, the effects of dredging on marine mammals are not expected
to rise to the level of a take. As stated, take is highly unlikely and
is not proposed to be authorized for dredging activities.
Pile Installation
A total of 28 permanent piles will be installed as part of this
project. Four 24-inch concrete piles will be installed on land above
the mean highwater (MHW)
[[Page 42467]]
line, and the remaining piles will all be installed in-water as
outlined in Table 1.
Concrete piles used for in[hyphen]water construction of the pier
structure for the Mission Bay Ferry Landing will involve the temporary
installation of a steel caisson sleeve followed by drilling of the rock
socket, with this installation and drilling process outlined below.
Four 14-inch steel H piles will be driven with a vibratory driver to
provide support for a 30-inch steel caisson sleeve, a large tubular
steel pile. The steel sleeve will also be installed using a vibratory
driver until refusal. Once the caisson is in place, sediment/soil/rock
within the caisson will be drilled out using a Bauer BG18 drill or
similar. All drilled sediment/soil/rock will be collected for disposal
and transported to an appropriate permitted facility. The concrete
piles are then inserted after the hole has been drilled. The 24-inch
concrete piles will then be placed/seated in bedrock for grouting then
the outer caisson and four H[hyphen]piles will be pulled. Figure 3 in
the IHA Application provides a depiction of this process. This method
of construction creates less overall noise and turbidity during
installation than driven piles. Drilling also is beneficial as it
reduces the stress and therefore chance of breakage or damage to the
pile during installation. Overall, ten 24-inch octagonal concrete piles
will be driven using these methods, including down the hole drilling.
Authorization of take by Level B harassment was requested and is
proposed for authorization by NMFS for drilling activities associated
with 24-inch concrete piles.
For the remaining piles, noise generated by vibratory and/or impact
hammers is expected to result in the disturbance of marine mammals and,
therefore, authorization of incidental take is proposed. Eight 36-inch
steel piles for the MBFL guide piles and donut fenders and two 16-inch
steel piles for the WTL platform will be installed with a combination
of vibratory driver and/or impact hammer. The four remaining 20-inch
square concrete piles to be installed in-water will be installed with
an impact hammer.
The Port estimates a production rate for pile driving of two to six
piles per day, resulting in a 15 days of pile driving and removal as
outlined in Table 1. Piles installed using an impact hammer will use a
Delmag D36/D46/D62 or similar diesel hammer. An overview of the sound
source levels for this pile installation can be found in Table 3. It
should be noted that the contractor will be instructed to implement
vibratory installation as much as possible.
All pile driving will be performed in compliance with the ``U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers Proposed Procedures for Permitting Projects
that will Not Adversely Affect Selected Listed Species in California''
and the associated USFWS and NMFS section 7 consultation documents
associated with these procedures.
Table 1--Summary of In Water Pile Installation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pile
Locations Project element diameter Pile type Number of Method Piles/day Construction
(inch) piles days
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Debris Removal................ 12 Steel........... 12 If necessary, a 12
vibratory
hammer will be
used to remove
up to 12 piles
60-120 seconds/
pile while
pulling the
pile up to
loosen it from
the sediment.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MBFL........ Pier............ 14 H-pile steel.... 4 Four 14-inch 4 10
30 Steel caisson... 1 steel H beams 1
24 Octagonal 10 will be driven 1
concrete. with Vibratory
Driver 600
seconds/pile
to support 30-
inch steel
caisson sleeve
driven with
Vibratory
Driver (900
sec/pile) to
refusal, drill
out hole
removing
soils, place
and position
concrete pile,
grout pile in
place while
simultaneously
pulling the
caisson.
Float Guide 36 Steel........... 6 Vibratory 5 2
Piles. Driver 1200
sec/pile then
Impact Hammer
last 15 ft
(150 strikes/
pile ~20
minutes);
bubble curtain
will be used
during impact
duration.
Donut Fender 36 Steel........... 2 Vibratory 5 ............
Piles. Driver 1200
sec/pile then
Impact Hammer
last 15 ft
(150 strikes/
pile ~20
minutes);
bubble curtain
will be used
during impact
duration.
WTL......... Platform........ 16 Steel........... 2 Vibratory 2 1
Driver 600 sec/
pile then
Impact Hammer
last 15 ft
(500 strikes/
pile ~20
minutes);
bubble curtain
will be used
during impact
duration.
Guide Piles..... 20 Square Concrete. 4 Impact Hammer 4 1
500 strikes/
pile (max 20
minutes); if
necessary
bubble curtain
will be used
during impact
duration.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Installation of Ferry Landing Structural Elements
Installation of the pier deck, pier canopy, float, and gangway
would be conducted from land and water-based vessels. This work would
include the use of generators, cranes, and other heavy equipment but is
not expected to result in any harassment of marine mammals. Therefore,
no take is requested or proposed for authorization for these
activities.
Proposed mitigation, monitoring, and reporting measures are
described in detail later in this document (please see Proposed
Mitigation and Proposed Monitoring and Reporting).
Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of Specified Activities
Sections 3 and 4 of the application summarize available information
regarding status and trends, distribution and habitat preferences, and
behavior
[[Page 42468]]
and life history, of the potentially affected species. Additional
information regarding population trends and threats may be found in
NMFS's Stock Assessment Reports (SAR; https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments) and
more general information about these species (e.g., physical and
behavioral descriptions) may be found on NMFS's website (https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/find-species).
Table 2 lists all species with expected potential for occurrence in
the Mission Bay/Central Waterfront area of San Francisco Bay and
summarizes information related to the population or stock, including
regulatory status under the MMPA and ESA and potential biological
removal (PBR), where known. For taxonomy, we follow the Committee on
Taxonomy (2017). PBR is defined by the MMPA as the maximum number of
animals, not including natural mortalities, that may be removed from a
marine mammal stock while allowing that stock to reach or maintain its
optimum sustainable population (as described in NMFS's SARs). While
NMFS neither anticipates nor proposes to authorize mortality here, PBR
and annual serious injury and mortality from anthropogenic sources are
included here as gross indicators of the status of the species and
other threats.
Marine mammal abundance estimates presented in this document
represent the total number of individuals that make up a given stock or
the total number estimated within a particular study or survey area.
NMFS's stock abundance estimates for most species represent the total
estimate of individuals within the geographic area, if known, that
comprises that stock. For some species, this geographic area may extend
beyond U.S. waters. All managed stocks in this region are assessed in
NMFS's U.S. 2017 SARs (Carretta et al., 2017). All values presented in
Table 2 are the most recent available at the time of publication and
are available in the 2017 SARs (Carretta et al., 2017).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stock abundance (CV,
ESA/ MMPA status; Nmin, most recent Annual M/
Common name Scientific name Stock strategic (Y/N) abundance survey) \2\ PBR SI \3\
\1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Cetartiodactyla--Cetacea--Superfamily Mysticeti (baleen whales)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Eschrichtiidae
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gray whale.......................... Eschrichtius robustus.. Eastern North Pacific.. -/-; N 20,990 (0.05, 20,125, 624 132
2011).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Balaenopteridae (rorquals)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Humpback whale...................... Megaptera novaeangliae. California/Oregon/ E/D; Y 1,918 (0.03, 1,876, 11 >6.5
Washington. 2014).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Superfamily Odontoceti (toothed whales, dolphins, and porpoises)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Delphinidae
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bottlenose dolphin.................. Tursiops truncatus..... California Coastal..... -/-; N 453 (0.06, 346, 2011). 2.7 >2
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Phocoenidae (porpoises)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harbor porpoise..................... Phocoena phocoena...... San Francisco-Russian -/-; N 9,886 (0.51, 6,625, 66 0
River. 2011).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Carnivora--Superfamily Pinnipedia
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Otariidae (eared seals and sea lions)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California sea lion................. Zalophus californianus. U.S.................... -/-; N 296,750 (n/a, 153,337, 9,200 389
2011).
Northern fur seal................... Callorhinus ursinus.... California............. -/-; N 14,050 (n/a, 7,524, 451 1.8
2013).
Eastern North Pacific.. -/-; N 626,734 (n/a, 530,474, 11,405 1.1
2014).
Guadalupe fur seal.................. Arctocephalus townsendi Mexico to California... T/D; Y 20,000 (n/a, 15,830, 542 >3.2
2010).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Phocidae (earless seals)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pacific harbor seal................. Phoca vitulina California............. -/-; N 30,968 (n/a, 27,348, 1,641 43
richardii. 2012).
Northern elephant seal.............. Mirounga angustirostris California Breeding.... -/-; N 179,000 (n/a, 81,368, 4,882 8.8
2010).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (-) indicates that the species is not listed
under the ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality
exceeds PBR or which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed
under the ESA is automatically designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
\2\ NMFS marine mammal stock assessment reports online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments assessments. CV is coefficient of variation; Nmin is the minimum estimate of stock abundance. In some cases, CV is not applicable.
\3\ These values, found in NMFSs SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g., commercial
fisheries, ship strike). Annual M/SI often cannot be determined precisely and is in some cases presented as a minimum value or range. A CV associated
with estimated mortality due to commercial fisheries is presented in some cases.
Note: Italicized species are not expected to be taken or proposed for authorization.
All species that could potentially occur in the Port's proposed
project area in San Francisco Bay are included in Table 2. However, the
temporal and/or spatial occurrence of humpback whale and Guadalupe fur
seal is such that take is not expected to occur, and they are not
discussed further beyond the explanation provided here. Humpback whales
are rare visitors to the interior of San Francisco Bay. A recent,
seasonal influx of humpback whales inside San
[[Page 42469]]
Francisco Bay near the Golden Gate was recorded from April to November
in 2016 and 2017 (Keener 2017). The Golden Gate is outside of this
project's action area and humpback whales are not expected to be
present during the project. Guadalupe fur seals occasionally range into
the waters of northern California and the Pacific Northwest. The
Farallon Islands (off central California) and Channel Islands (off
southern California) are used as haulouts during these movements (Simon
2016). Juvenile Guadalupe fur seals occasionally strand in the vicinity
of San Francisco, especially during El Ni[ntilde]o events. Most
strandings along the California coast are animals younger than two
years old, with evidence of malnutrition (NMFS 2017a). Because
Guadalupe fur seals are highly rare in the area, and sightings are
associated with abnormal weather conditions, such as El Ni[ntilde]o
events, NMFS has determined that no Guadalupe fur seals are likely to
occur in the project vicinity and, therefore, no take is expected to
occur.
Harbor Seal
Harbor seals are found from Baja California to the eastern Aleutian
Islands of Alaska. The species primarily hauls out on remote mainland
and island beaches and reefs, and estuary areas. Harbor seals tend to
forage locally within 53 miles (mi) (85 kilometers (km)) of haul-out
sites (Harvey and Goley 2011). Harbor seal is the most common marine
mammal species observed in the Bay and individuals are commonly seen
near the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge east span (CalTrans 2013b,
2013c). Tagging studies have shown that most seals tagged in the Bay
remain in the Bay (Harvey and Goley 2011; Manugian 2013). Foraging
often occurs in the Bay, as noted by observations of seals exhibiting
foraging behavior (short dives less than five minutes, moving back and
forth in an area, and sometimes tearing up prey at the surface).
Gray Whale
Gray whales are large baleen whales. They grow to approximately 50
ft in length and weigh up to 40 tons. They are one of the most
frequently seen whales along the California coast, easily recognized by
their mottled gray color and lack of dorsal fin. Adult whales carry
heavy loads of attached barnacles, which add to their mottled
appearance. Gray whales are divided into the Eastern North Pacific and
Western North Pacific stocks. Both stocks migrate each year along the
west coast of continental North America and Alaska. The Eastern North
Pacific stock is much larger and is more likely to occur in the San
Francisco Bay area. Western North Pacific Gray whales have summer and
fall feeding grounds in the Okhotsk Sea off northeast Sakhalin Island,
Russia, and off southeastern Kamchatka in the Bering Sea (NMFS 2017c),
so they would not be expected to occur in San Francisco Bay during
construction activity for this project. With the exception of an
unusual mortality event in 1999 and 2000, the population of Eastern
North Pacific stock has increased over the last 20 years and has been
stable since the 1990s (NMFS 2015c).
Gray whales are the only baleen whale known to feed on the sea
floor, where they scoop up bottom sediments to filter out benthic
crustaceans, mollusks, and worms (NMFS 2015c). They feed in northern
waters primarily off the Bering, Chukchi, and western Beaufort Seas
during the summer. Between December and January, late-stage pregnant
females, adult males, and immature females and males migrate southward
to breeding areas around Mexico. The northward migration occurs between
February and March. Coastal waters just outside San Francisco Bay are
considered a migratory Biologically Important Area for the northward
progression of gray whales (Calambokidis et al., 2015). During this
time, recently pregnant females, adult males, immature females, and
females with calves move north to the feeding grounds (Calambokidis et
al., 2014). A few individuals enter into the San Francisco Bay during
their northward migration.
Bottlenose Dolphins
Bottlenose dolphins are distributed world-wide in tropical and
warm-temperate waters. In many regions, including California, separate
coastal and offshore populations are known (Walker 1981; Ross and
Cockcroft 1990; Van Waerebeek et al. 1990). The California coastal
stock of bottlenose dolphins is distinct from the offshore stock, based
on significant differences in genetics and cranial morphology (Perrin
et al. 2011, Lowther-Thielking et al. 2015). California coastal
bottlenose dolphins are found within about one km of shore (Hansen,
1990; Carretta et al. 1998; Defran and Weller 1999) with the range
extending north over the last several decades related to El Ni[ntilde]o
events and increased ocean temperatures. As the range of bottlenose
dolphins extended north, dolphins began entering the Bay in 2010
(Szczepaniak 2013). Until 2016, most bottlenose dolphins in San
Francisco Bay were observed in the western Bay, from the Golden Gate
Bridge to Oyster Point and Redwood City (Perlman 2017).
Harbor Porpoise
Harbor porpoise are seldom found in waters warmer than 62.6 degrees
Fahrenheit (17 degrees Celsius) (Read 1990) or south of Point
Conception, and occurs as far north as the Bering Sea (Barlow and Hanan
1995; Carretta et al., 2017). The San Francisco-Russian River stock is
found from Pescadero, 18 mi (30 km) south of the Bay, to 99 mi (160 km)
north of the Bay at Point Arena (Carretta et al., 2017). In most areas,
harbor porpoise occurs in small groups, consisting of just a few
individuals.
Occasional sightings of harbor porpoises in the Bay, including near
the Yerba Buena Island harbor seal haul[hyphen]out site, were reported
by the Caltrans marine mammal monitoring program beginning in 2008
(Caltrans 2018). Continued sightings from Caltrans and the Golden Gate
Cetacean Research (GGCR) Organization suggests that the species is
returning to San Francisco Bay after an absence of approximately 65
years (GGCR 2010). This re[hyphen]immergence is not unique to San
Francisco Bay, but rather indicative of the harbor porpoise in general
along the west coast. GGCR has been issued a scientific research permit
from NMFS for a multi[hyphen]year assessment to document the population
abundance and distribution in the Bay (82 FR 60374). Recent
observations of harbor porpoises have been reported by GGCR researchers
off Cavallo Point, outside Raccoon Strait between Tiburon and Angel
Island, off Fort Point and as far into the Bay as Carquinez Strait
(Perlman 2010). Based on the Caltrans and GGCR monitoring, over 100
porpoises were seen at one time entering San Francisco Bay; and over
600 individual animals have been documented in a photo[hyphen]ID
database. Reported sightings are concentrated in the vicinity of the
Golden Gate Bridge and Angel Island, with lesser numbers sighted south
of Alcatraz and west of Treasure Island (AECOM 2017).
California Sea Lion
California sea lions breed on the offshore islands of California
from May through July (Heath and Perrin 2009). During the non-breeding
season, adult and sub-adult males and juveniles migrate northward along
the coast, to central and northern California, Oregon, Washington, and
Vancouver Island (Jefferson et al., 1993). They return south the
following spring (Lowry and Forney 2005; Heath and Perrin 2009).
Females and some juveniles tend to
[[Page 42470]]
remain closer to rookeries (Antonelis et al., 1990; Melin et al.,
2008).
In San Francisco Bay, California sea lions have been observed at
Angel Island and occupying the docks near Pier 39 which is the largest
California sea lion haul[hyphen]out in San Francisco Bay. A maximum of
1,706 sea lions were counted at Pier 39 in 2009. However, since then
the population has averaged at about 50-300 depending upon the season
(TMMC 2017). This group of sea lions has decreased in size in recent
years, coincident with a fluctuating decrease in the herring population
in the Bay. There are no known breeding sites within San Francisco Bay.
Their primary breeding site is in the Channel Islands (USACE 2011). The
sea lions appear at Pier 39 after returning from the Channel Islands at
the beginning of August (Bauer 1999). No other sea lion haul[hyphen]out
sites have been identified in the Bay and no pupping has been observed
at the Pier 39 site or any other site in San Francisco Bay under normal
conditions (USACE 2011). Although there has been documentation of
pupping on docks in the Bay, this event was during a domoic acid event.
The Port does not anticipate that any domoic events will occur during
the project construction activities.
The project site is approximately four miles away from Pier 39.
Although there is little information regarding the foraging behavior of
the California sea lion in southern San Francisco Bay, they have been
observed foraging on a regular basis in the shipping channel south of
Yerba Buena Island.
Foraging grounds have also been identified for pinnipeds, including
sea lions, between Yerba Buena Island and Treasure Island, as well as
off the Tiburon Peninsula (Caltrans, 2006). The California sea lions
that use the Pier 39 haul[hyphen]out site may be feeding on Pacific
herring (Clupea harengus), northern anchovy, and other prey in the
waters of San Francisco Bay (Caltrans, 2013a). In addition to the Pier
39 haul[hyphen]out, California sea lions haul out on buoys and similar
structures throughout San Francisco Bay. They mainly are seen swimming
off the San Francisco and Marin shorelines within San Francisco Bay,
but may occasionally enter the project area to forage.
Northern Elephant Seal
Northern elephant seal is common on California coastal mainland and
island sites, where the species pups, breeds, rests, and molts. The
largest rookeries are on San Nicolas and San Miguel islands in the
northern Channel Islands. Near the Bay, elephant seals breed, molt, and
haul out at A[ntilde]o Nuevo Island, the Farallon Islands, and Point
Reyes National Seashore.
Northern elephant seals haul out to give birth and breed from
December through March. Pups remain onshore or in adjacent shallow
water through May. Both sexes make two foraging migrations each year:
One after breeding and the second after molting (Stewart 1989; Stewart
and DeLong 1995). Adult females migrate to the central North Pacific to
forage, and males migrate to the Gulf of Alaska to forage (Robinson et
al. 2012). Pup mortality is high when they make the first trip to sea
in May, and this period correlates with the time of most strandings.
Pups of the year return in the late summer and fall, to haul out at
breeding rookery and small haul out sites, but occasionally they may
make brief stops in the Bay.
Generally, only juvenile elephant seals enter the Bay and do not
remain long. The most recent sighting near the project area was in
2012, on the beach at Clipper Cove on Treasure Island, when a healthy
yearling elephant seal hauled out for approximately 1 day.
Approximately 100 juvenile northern elephant seals strand in or near
the Bay each year, including individual strandings at Yerba Buena
Island (YBI) and Treasure Island (less than 10 strandings per year).
Northern Fur Seal
Northern fur seal breeds on the offshore islands of California and
in the Bering Sea from May through July. Two stocks of Northern fur
seals may occur near the Bay, the California and Eastern Pacific
stocks. The California stock breeds, pups, and forages off the
California coast. The Eastern Pacific stock breeds and pups on islands
in the Bering Sea, but females and juveniles move south to California
waters to forage in the fall and winter months.
Both the California and Eastern Pacific stocks forage in the
offshore waters of California, but only sick, emaciated, or injured fur
seals enter the Bay. The Marine Mammal Center (TMMC) occasionally picks
up stranded fur seals around YBI and Treasure Island.
Marine Mammal Hearing
Hearing is the most important sensory modality for marine mammals
underwater, and exposure to anthropogenic sound can have deleterious
effects. To appropriately assess the potential effects of exposure to
sound, it is necessary to understand the frequency ranges marine
mammals are able to hear. Current data indicate that not all marine
mammal species have equal hearing capabilities (e.g., Richardson et
al., 1995; Wartzok and Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings, 2008). To reflect
this, Southall et al. (2007) recommended that marine mammals be divided
into functional hearing groups based on directly measured or estimated
hearing ranges on the basis of available behavioral response data,
audiograms derived using auditory evoked potential techniques,
anatomical modeling, and other data. Note that no direct measurements
of hearing ability have been successfully completed for mysticetes
(i.e., low-frequency cetaceans). Subsequently, NMFS (2018) described
generalized hearing ranges for these marine mammal hearing groups.
Generalized hearing ranges were chosen based on the approximately 65 dB
threshold from the normalized composite audiograms, with the exception
for lower limits for low-frequency cetaceans where the lower bound was
deemed to be biologically implausible and the lower bound from Southall
et al. (2007) retained. The functional groups and the associated
frequencies are indicated below (note that these frequency ranges
correspond to the range for the composite group, with the entire range
not necessarily reflecting the capabilities of every species within
that group):
Low-frequency cetaceans (mysticetes): Generalized hearing
is estimated to occur between approximately 7 Hz and 35 kHz;
Mid-frequency cetaceans (larger toothed whales, beaked
whales, and most delphinids): Generalized hearing is estimated to occur
between approximately 150 Hz and 160 kHz;
High-frequency cetaceans (porpoises, river dolphins, and
members of the genera Kogia and Cephalorhynchus; including two members
of the genus Lagenorhynchus, on the basis of recent echolocation data
and genetic data): Generalized hearing is estimated to occur between
approximately 275 Hz and 160 kHz.
Pinnipeds in water; Phocidae (true seals): Generalized
hearing is estimated to occur between approximately 50 Hz to 86 kHz;
Pinnipeds in water; Otariidae (eared seals): Generalized
hearing is estimated to occur between 60 Hz and 39 kHz.
The pinniped functional hearing group was modified from Southall et
al. (2007) on the basis of data indicating that phocid species have
consistently demonstrated an extended frequency range of hearing
compared to otariids, especially in the higher frequency range
(Hemil[auml] et al., 2006; Kastelein et al., 2009; Reichmuth and Holt,
2013).
For more detail concerning these groups and associated frequency
ranges,
[[Page 42471]]
please see NMFS (2018) for a review of available information. Seven
marine mammal species (three cetacean and four pinniped (two otariid
and two phocid) species) have the reasonable potential to co-occur with
the proposed survey activities. Please refer to Table 2. Of the
cetacean species that may be present, the gray whale is classified as a
low-frequency cetacean, the bottlenose dolphin is classified as a mid-
frequency cetacean, and the harbor porpoise is classified as a high-
frequency cetacean.
Potential Effects of Specified Activities on Marine Mammals and Their
Habitat
This section includes a summary and discussion of the ways that
components of the specified activity may impact marine mammals and
their habitat. The ``Estimated Take'' section later in this document
includes a quantitative analysis of the number of individuals that are
expected to be taken by this activity. The ``Negligible Impact Analysis
and Determination'' section considers the content of this section, the
``Estimated Take'' section, and the ``Proposed Mitigation'' section, to
draw conclusions regarding the likely impacts of these activities on
the reproductive success or survivorship of individuals and how those
impacts on individuals are likely to impact marine mammal species or
stocks.
Description of Sound
Sound travels in waves, the basic components of which are
frequency, wavelength, velocity, and amplitude. Frequency is the number
of pressure waves that pass by a reference point per unit of time and
is measured in Hz or cycles per second. Wavelength is the distance
between two peaks of a sound wave; lower frequency sounds have longer
wavelengths than higher frequency sounds. Amplitude is the height of
the sound pressure wave or the `loudness' of a sound and is typically
measured using the dB scale. A dB is the ratio between a measured
pressure (with sound) and a reference pressure (sound at a constant
pressure, established by scientific standards). It is a logarithmic
unit that accounts for large variations in amplitude; therefore,
relatively small changes in dB ratings correspond to large changes in
sound pressure. When referring to sound pressure levels (SPLs; the
sound force per unit area), sound is referenced in the context of
underwater sound pressure to one microPascal ([mu]Pa). One pascal is
the pressure resulting from a force of one newton exerted over an area
of one square meter (m\2\). The source level (SL) represents the sound
level at a distance of 1 m from the source (referenced to 1 [mu]Pa).
The received level is the sound level at the listener's position. Note
that all underwater sound levels in this document are referenced to a
pressure of 1 [mu]Pa and all airborne sound levels in this document are
referenced to a pressure of 20 [mu]Pa.
Root mean square (rms) is the quadratic mean sound pressure over
the duration of an impulse. Rms is calculated by squaring all of the
sound amplitudes, averaging the squares, and then taking the square
root of the average (Urick 1983). Rms accounts for both positive and
negative values; squaring the pressures makes all values positive so
that they may be accounted for in the summation of pressure levels
(Hastings and Popper 2005). This measurement is often used in the
context of discussing behavioral effects, in part because behavioral
effects, which often result from auditory cues, may be better expressed
through averaged units than by peak pressures.
When underwater objects vibrate or activity occurs, sound-pressure
waves are created. These waves alternately compress and decompress the
water as the sound wave travels. Underwater sound waves radiate in all
directions away from the source (similar to ripples on the surface of a
pond), except in cases where the source is directional. The
compressions and decompressions associated with sound waves are
detected as changes in pressure by aquatic life and man-made sound
receptors such as hydrophones.
Even in the absence of sound from the specified activity, the
underwater environment is typically loud due to ambient sound. Ambient
sound is defined as environmental background sound levels lacking a
single source or point (Richardson et al., 1995), and the sound level
of a region is defined by the total acoustical energy being generated
by known and unknown sources. These sources may include physical (e.g.,
waves, earthquakes, ice, atmospheric sound), biological (e.g., sounds
produced by marine mammals, fish, and invertebrates), and anthropogenic
sound (e.g., vessels, dredging, aircraft, construction). A number of
sources contribute to ambient sound, including the following
(Richardson et al., 1995):
Wind and waves: The complex interactions between wind and
water surface, including processes such as breaking waves and wave-
induced bubble oscillations and cavitation, are a main source of
naturally occurring ambient noise for frequencies between 200 Hz and 50
kilohertz (kHz) (Mitson 1995). In general, ambient sound levels tend to
increase with increasing wind speed and wave height. Surf noise becomes
important near shore, with measurements collected at a distance of 8.5
km from shore showing an increase of 10 dB in the 100 to 700 Hz band
during heavy surf conditions.
Precipitation: Sound from rain and hail impacting the
water surface can become an important component of total noise at
frequencies above 500 Hz, and possibly down to 100 Hz during quiet
times.
Biological: Marine mammals can contribute significantly to
ambient noise levels, as can some fish and shrimp. The frequency band
for biological contributions is from approximately 12 Hz to over 100
kHz.
Anthropogenic: Sources of ambient noise related to human
activity include transportation (surface vessels and aircraft),
dredging and construction, oil and gas drilling and production, seismic
surveys, sonar, explosions, and ocean acoustic studies. Shipping noise
typically dominates the total ambient noise for frequencies between 20
and 300 Hz. In general, the frequencies of anthropogenic sounds are
below 1 kHz and, if higher frequency sound levels are created, they
attenuate rapidly (Richardson et al., 1995). Sound from identifiable
anthropogenic sources other than the activity of interest (e.g., a
passing vessel) is sometimes termed background sound, as opposed to
ambient sound.
The sum of the various natural and anthropogenic sound sources at
any given location and time--which comprise ``ambient'' or
``background'' sound--depends not only on the source levels (as
determined by current weather conditions and levels of biological and
shipping activity) but also on the ability of sound to propagate
through the environment. In turn, sound propagation is dependent on the
spatially and temporally varying properties of the water column and sea
floor, and is frequency-dependent. As a result of the dependence on a
large number of varying factors, ambient sound levels can be expected
to vary widely over both coarse and fine spatial and temporal scales.
Sound levels at a given frequency and location can vary by 10-20 dB
from day to day (Richardson et al., 1995). The result is that,
depending on the source type and its intensity, sound from the
specified activity may be a negligible addition to the local
environment or could form a distinctive signal that may affect marine
mammals.
Description of Sound Sources
In-water construction activities associated with the project would
include impact pile driving, vibratory
[[Page 42472]]
pile driving, vibratory pile removal, and down the hole drilling. The
sounds produced by these activities fall into one of two general sound
types: Impulsive and non-impulsive (defined in the following). The
distinction between these two sound types is important because they
have differing potential to cause physical effects, particularly with
regard to hearing (e.g., Ward 1997 in Southall et al., 2007). Please
see Southall et al. (2007) for an in-depth discussion of these
concepts.
Impulsive sound sources (e.g., explosions, gunshots, sonic booms,
impact pile driving) produce signals that are brief (typically
considered to be less than one second), broadband, atonal transients
(ANSI 1986; Harris 1998; NIOSH 1998; ISO 2003; ANSI 2005) and occur
either as isolated events or repeated in some succession. Impulsive
sounds are all characterized by a relatively rapid rise from ambient
pressure to a maximal pressure value followed by a rapid decay period
that may include a period of diminishing, oscillating maximal and
minimal pressures, and generally have an increased capacity to induce
physical injury as compared with sounds that lack these features.
Non-impulsive sounds can be tonal, narrowband, or broadband, brief
or prolonged, and may be either continuous or non-continuous (NIOSH
1998). Some of these non-impulsive sounds can be transient signals of
short duration but without the essential properties of impulses (e.g.,
rapid rise time). Examples of non-impulsive sounds include those
produced by vessels, aircraft, machinery operations such as drilling or
dredging, vibratory pile driving, and active sonar systems. The
duration of such sounds, as received at a distance, can be greatly
extended in a highly reverberant environment.
Impact hammers operate by repeatedly dropping a heavy piston onto a
pile to drive the pile into the substrate. Sound generated by impact
hammers is characterized by rapid rise times and high peak levels, a
potentially injurious combination (Hastings and Popper 2005). Vibratory
hammers install piles by vibrating them and allowing the weight of the
hammer to push them into the sediment. Vibratory hammers produce
significantly less sound than impact hammers. Peak SPLs may be 180 dB
or greater, but are generally 10 to 20 dB lower than SPLs generated
during impact pile driving of the same-sized pile (Oestman et al.,
2009). Rise time is slower, reducing the probability and severity of
injury, and sound energy is distributed over a greater amount of time
(Nedwell and Edwards 2002; Carlson et al., 2005).
Acoustic Impacts
Anthropogenic sounds cover a broad range of frequencies and sound
levels and can have a range of highly variable impacts on marine life,
from none or minor to potentially severe responses, depending on
received levels, duration of exposure, behavioral context, and various
other factors. The potential effects of underwater sound from active
acoustic sources can potentially result in one or more of the following
direct impacts on marine mammals; temporary or permanent hearing
impairment, non-auditory physical or physiological effects, behavioral
disturbance, stress, and masking (Richardson et al., 1995; Gordon et
al., 2004; Nowacek et al., 2007; Southall et al., 2007; Gotz et al.,
2009). The degree of effect is intrinsically related to the signal
characteristics, received level, distance from the source, and duration
of the sound exposure. In general, sudden, high level sounds can cause
hearing loss, as can longer exposures to lower level sounds. Temporary
or permanent loss of hearing will occur almost exclusively for noise
within an animal's hearing range. We first describe specific
manifestations of acoustic effects before providing discussion specific
to the Port of San Fancisco's construction activities.
Richardson et al. (1995) described zones of increasing intensity of
effect that might be expected to occur, in relation to distance from a
source and assuming that the signal is within an animal's hearing
range. First is the area within which the acoustic signal would be
audible (potentially perceived) to the animal, but not strong enough to
elicit any overt behavioral or physiological response. The next zone
corresponds with the area where the signal is audible to the animal and
of sufficient intensity to elicit behavioral or physiological
responsiveness. Third is a zone within which, for signals of high
intensity, the received level is sufficient to potentially cause
discomfort or tissue damage to auditory or other systems. Overlaying
these zones to a certain extent is the area within which masking (i.e.,
when a sound interferes with or masks the ability of an animal to
detect a signal of interest that is above the absolute hearing
threshold) may occur; the masking zone may be highly variable in size.
We describe the more severe effects (i.e., permanent hearing
impairment, certain non-auditory physical or physiological effects)
only briefly as we do not expect that there is a reasonable likelihood
that the Port of San Francisco's activities may result in such effects
(see below for further discussion). Marine mammals exposed to high-
intensity sound, or to lower-intensity sound for prolonged periods, can
experience hearing threshold shift (TS), which is the loss of hearing
sensitivity at certain frequency ranges (Kastak et al., 1999; Schlundt
et al., 2000; Finneran et al., 2002, 2005). TS can be permanent (PTS),
in which case the loss of hearing sensitivity is not fully recoverable,
or temporary (TTS), in which case the animal's hearing threshold would
recover over time (Southall et al., 2007). Repeated sound exposure that
leads to TTS could cause PTS. In severe cases of PTS, there can be
total or partial deafness, while in most cases the animal has an
impaired ability to hear sounds in specific frequency ranges (Kryter
1985).
When PTS occurs, there is physical damage to the sound receptors in
the ear (i.e., tissue damage), whereas TTS represents primarily tissue
fatigue and is reversible (Southall et al., 2007). In addition, other
investigators have suggested that TTS is within the normal bounds of
physiological variability and tolerance and does not represent physical
injury (e.g., Ward 1997). Therefore, NMFS does not consider TTS to
constitute auditory injury.
Relationships between TTS and PTS thresholds have not been studied
in marine mammals--PTS data exists only for a single harbor seal
(Kastak et al., 2008)--but are assumed to be similar to those in humans
and other terrestrial mammals. PTS typically occurs at exposure levels
at least several dB above a 40-dB threshold shift approximates PTS
onset; e.g., Kryter et al., 1966; Miller, 1974 found that inducing mild
TTS (a 6-dB threshold shift) approximates TTS onset (e.g., Southall et
al., 2007). Based on data from terrestrial mammals, a precautionary
assumption is that the PTS thresholds for impulsive sounds (such as
impact pile driving sounds received close to the source) are at least 6
dB higher than the TTS threshold on a peak-pressure basis and PTS
cumulative sound exposure level thresholds are 15 to 20 dB higher than
TTS cumulative sound exposure level thresholds (Southall et al., 2007).
Given the higher level of sound or longer exposure duration necessary
to cause PTS as compared with TTS, it is considerably less likely that
PTS could occur.
TTS is the mildest form of hearing impairment that can occur during
exposure to sound (Kryter 1985). While experiencing TTS, the hearing
threshold rises, and a sound must be at a higher
[[Page 42473]]
level in order to be heard. In terrestrial and marine mammals, TTS can
last from minutes or hours to days (in cases of strong TTS). In many
cases, hearing sensitivity recovers rapidly after exposure to the sound
ends. Few data on sound levels and durations necessary to elicit mild
TTS have been obtained for marine mammals.
Marine mammal hearing plays a critical role in communication with
conspecifics, and interpretation of environmental cues for purposes
such as predator avoidance and prey capture. Depending on the degree
(elevation of threshold in dB), duration (i.e., recovery time), and
frequency range of TTS, and the context in which it is experienced, TTS
can have effects on marine mammals ranging from discountable to
serious. For example, a marine mammal may be able to readily compensate
for a brief, relatively small amount of TTS in a non-critical frequency
range that occurs during a time where ambient noise is lower and there
are not as many competing sounds present. Alternatively, a larger
amount and longer duration of TTS sustained during a time when
communication is critical for successful mother/calf interactions could
have more serious impacts.
Currently, TTS data only exist for four species of cetaceans
(bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus), beluga whale (Delphinapterus
leucas), harbor porpoise, and Yangtze finless porpoise (Neophocoena
asiaeorientalis) and three species of pinnipeds (northern elephant
seal, harbor seal, and California sea lion) exposed to a limited number
of sound sources (i.e., mostly tones and octave-band noise) in
laboratory settings (e.g., Finneran et al., 2002; Nachtigall et al.,
2004; Kastak et al., 2005; Lucke et al., 2009; Popov et al., 2011). In
general, harbor seals (Kastak et al., 2005; Kastelein et al., 2012a)
and harbor porpoises (Lucke et al., 2009; Kastelein et al., 2012b) have
a lower TTS onset than other measured pinniped or cetacean species.
Additionally, the existing marine mammal TTS data come from a limited
number of individuals within these species. There are no data available
on noise-induced hearing loss for mysticetes. For summaries of data on
TTS in marine mammals or for further discussion of TTS onset
thresholds, please see Finneran (2015).
In addition to PTS and TTS, there is a potential for non-auditory
physiological effects or injuries that theoretically might occur in
marine mammals exposed to high level underwater sound or as a secondary
effect of extreme behavioral reactions (e.g., change in dive profile as
a result of an avoidance reaction) caused by exposure to sound. These
impacts can include neurological effects, bubble formation, resonance
effects, and other types of organ or tissue damage (Cox et al., 2006;
Southall et al., 2007; Zimmer and Tyack 2007). The Port of San
Francisco's activities do not involve the use of devices such as
explosives or mid-frequency active sonar that are associated with these
types of effects. These impacts are not anticipated to occur as a
result of the Port's work and are not discussed further.
When a live or dead marine mammal swims or floats onto shore and is
incapable of returning to sea, the event is termed a ``stranding'' (16
U.S.C. 1421h(3)). Marine mammals are known to strand for a variety of
reasons, such as infectious agents, biotoxicosis, starvation, fishery
interaction, ship strike, unusual oceanographic or weather events,
sound exposure, or combinations of these stressors sustained
concurrently or in series (e.g., Geraci et al., 1999). However, the
cause or causes of most strandings are unknown (e.g., Best 1982).
Combinations of dissimilar stressors may combine to kill an animal or
dramatically reduce its fitness, even though one exposure without the
other would not be expected to produce the same outcome (e.g., Sih et
al., 2004). For further description of stranding events see, e.g.,
Southall et al., 2006; Jepson et al., 2013; Wright et al., 2013.
Behavioral Effects
Behavioral disturbance may include a variety of effects, including
subtle changes in behavior (e.g., minor or brief avoidance of an area
or changes in vocalizations), more conspicuous changes in similar
behavioral activities, and more sustained and/or potentially severe
reactions, such as displacement from or abandonment of high-quality
habitat. Behavioral responses to sound are highly variable and context-
specific and any reactions depend on numerous intrinsic and extrinsic
factors (e.g., species, state of maturity, experience, current
activity, reproductive state, auditory sensitivity, time of day), as
well as the interplay between factors (e.g., Richardson et al., 1995;
Wartzok et al., 2003; Southall et al., 2007; Weilgart, 2007; Archer et
al., 2010). Behavioral reactions can vary not only among individuals
but also within an individual, depending on previous experience with a
sound source, context, and numerous other factors (Ellison et al.,
2012), and can vary depending on characteristics associated with the
sound source (e.g., whether it is moving or stationary, number of
sources, distance from the source). Please see Appendices B-C of
Southall et al. (2007) for a review of studies involving marine mammal
behavioral responses to sound.
Habituation can occur when an animal's response to a stimulus wanes
with repeated exposure, usually in the absence of unpleasant associated
events (Wartzok et al., 2003). Animals are most likely to habituate to
sounds that are predictable and unvarying. It is important to note that
habituation is appropriately considered as a ``progressive reduction in
response to stimuli that are perceived as neither aversive nor
beneficial,'' rather than as, more generally, moderation in response to
human disturbance (Bejder et al., 2009). The opposite process is
sensitization, when an unpleasant experience leads to subsequent
responses, often in the form of avoidance, at a lower level of
exposure. As noted, behavioral state may affect the type of response.
For example, animals that are resting may show greater behavioral
change in response to disturbing sound levels than animals that are
highly motivated to remain in an area for feeding (Richardson et al.,
1995; NRC 2003; Wartzok et al., 2003). Controlled experiments with
captive marine mammals have showed pronounced behavioral reactions,
including avoidance of loud sound sources (Ridgway et al., 1997;
Finneran et al., 2003). Observed responses of wild marine mammals to
loud-impulsive sound sources (typically seismic airguns or acoustic
harassment devices) have been varied but often consist of avoidance
behavior or other behavioral changes suggesting discomfort (Morton and
Symonds 2002; see also Richardson et al., 1995; Nowacek et al., 2007).
Available studies show wide variation in response to underwater
sound; therefore, it is difficult to predict specifically how any given
sound in a particular instance might affect marine mammals perceiving
the signal. If a marine mammal does react briefly to an underwater
sound by changing its behavior or moving a small distance, the impacts
of the change are unlikely to be significant to the individual, let
alone the stock or population. However, if a sound source displaces
marine mammals from an important feeding or breeding area for a
prolonged period, impacts on individuals and populations could be
significant (e.g., Lusseau and Bejder 2007; Weilgart 2007; NRC 2005).
However, there are broad categories of potential response, which we
describe in greater detail here, that include alteration of dive
behavior, alteration of foraging behavior, effects to breathing,
[[Page 42474]]
interference with or alteration of vocalization, avoidance, and flight.
Changes in dive behavior can vary widely, and may consist of
increased or decreased dive times and surface intervals as well as
changes in the rates of ascent and descent during a dive (e.g., Frankel
and Clark 2000; Costa et al., 2003; Ng and Leung 2003; Nowacek et al.,
2004; Goldbogen et al., 2013a,b). Variations in dive behavior may
reflect interruptions in biologically significant activities (e.g.,
foraging) or they may be of little biological significance. The impact
of an alteration to dive behavior resulting from an acoustic exposure
depends on what the animal is doing at the time of the exposure and the
type and magnitude of the response.
Disruption of feeding behavior can be difficult to correlate with
anthropogenic sound exposure, so it is usually inferred by observed
displacement from known foraging areas, the appearance of secondary
indicators (e.g., bubble nets or sediment plumes), or changes in dive
behavior. As for other types of behavioral response, the frequency,
duration, and temporal pattern of signal presentation, as well as
differences in species sensitivity, are likely contributing factors to
differences in response in any given circumstance (e.g., Croll et al.,
2001; Nowacek et al.; 2004; Madsen et al., 2006; Yazvenko et al.,
2007). A determination of whether foraging disruptions incur fitness
consequences would require information on or estimates of the energetic
requirements of the affected individuals and the relationship between
prey availability, foraging effort and success, and the life history
stage of the animal.
Variations in respiration naturally occur with different behaviors
and alterations to breathing rate as a function of acoustic exposure
can be expected to co-occur with other behavioral reactions, such as a
flight response or an alteration in diving. However, respiration rates
in and of themselves may be representative of annoyance or an acute
stress response. Various studies have shown that respiration rates may
either be unaffected or could increase, depending on the species and
signal characteristics, again highlighting the importance in
understanding species differences in the tolerance of underwater noise
when determining the potential for impacts resulting from anthropogenic
sound exposure (e.g., Kastelein et al., 2001, 2005, 2006; Gailey et
al., 2007).
Marine mammals vocalize for different purposes and across multiple
modes, such as whistling, echolocation click production, calling, and
singing. Changes in vocalization behavior in response to anthropogenic
noise can occur for any of these modes and may result from a need to
compete with an increase in background noise or may reflect increased
vigilance or a startle response. For example, in the presence of
potentially masking signals, humpback whales and killer whales have
been observed to increase the length of their songs (Miller et al.,
2000; Fristrup et al., 2003; Foote et al., 2004), while right whales
(Eubalaena glacialis) have been observed to shift the frequency content
of their calls upward while reducing the rate of calling in areas of
increased anthropogenic noise (Parks et al., 2007). In some cases,
animals may cease sound production during production of aversive
signals (Bowles et al., 1994).
Avoidance is the displacement of an individual from an area or
migration path because of the presence of a sound or other stressors,
and is one of the most obvious manifestations of disturbance in marine
mammals (Richardson et al., 1995). For example, gray whales are known
to change direction--deflecting from customary migratory paths--in
order to avoid noise from seismic surveys (Malme et al., 1984).
Avoidance may be short-term, with animals returning to the area once
the noise has ceased (e.g., Bowles et al., 1994; Goold, 1996; Stone et
al., 2000; Morton and Symonds, 2002; Gailey et al., 2007). Longer-term
displacement is possible, however, which may lead to changes in
abundance or distribution patterns of the affected species in the
affected region if habituation to the presence of the sound does not
occur (e.g., Blackwell et al., 2004; Bejder et al., 2006; Teilmann et
al., 2006).
A flight response is a dramatic change in normal movement to a
directed and rapid movement away from the perceived location of a sound
source. The flight response differs from other avoidance responses in
the intensity of the response (e.g., directed movement, rate of
travel). Relatively little information on flight responses of marine
mammals to anthropogenic signals exist, although observations of flight
responses to the presence of predators have occurred (Connor and
Heithaus 1996). The result of a flight response could range from brief,
temporary exertion and displacement from the area where the signal
provokes flight to, in extreme cases, marine mammal strandings (Evans
and England 2001). However, it should be noted that response to a
perceived predator does not necessarily invoke flight (Ford and Reeves
2008), and whether individuals are solitary or in groups may influence
the response.
Behavioral disturbance can also impact marine mammals in more
subtle ways. Increased vigilance may result in costs related to
diversion of focus and attention (i.e., when a response consists of
increased vigilance, it may come at the cost of decreased attention to
other critical behaviors such as foraging or resting). These effects
have generally not been demonstrated for marine mammals, but studies
involving fish and terrestrial animals have shown that increased
vigilance may substantially reduce feeding rates (e.g., Beauchamp and
Livoreil 1997; Fritz et al., 2002; Purser and Radford 2011). In
addition, chronic disturbance can cause population declines through
reduction of fitness (e.g., decline in body condition) and subsequent
reduction in reproductive success, survival, or both (e.g., Harrington
and Veitch, 1992; Daan et al., 1996; Bradshaw et al., 1998). However,
Ridgway et al. (2006) reported that increased vigilance in bottlenose
dolphins exposed to sound over a five-day period did not cause any
sleep deprivation or stress effects.
Many animals perform vital functions, such as feeding, resting,
traveling, and socializing, on a diel cycle (24-hour cycle). Disruption
of such functions resulting from reactions to stressors such as sound
exposure are more likely to be significant if they last more than one
diel cycle or recur on subsequent days (Southall et al., 2007).
Consequently, a behavioral response lasting less than one day and not
recurring on subsequent days is not considered particularly severe
unless it could directly affect reproduction or survival (Southall et
al., 2007). Note that there is a difference between multi-day
substantive behavioral reactions and multi-day anthropogenic
activities. For example, just because an activity lasts for multiple
days does not necessarily mean that individual animals are either
exposed to activity-related stressors for multiple days or, further,
exposed in a manner resulting in sustained multi-day substantive
behavioral responses.
Behavioral Effects of the Port's Activities (Pile Driving and Drilling)
In the absence of mitigation, impacts to marine species could be
expected to include physiological and behavioral responses to the
acoustic signature (Viada et al., 2008). Potential effects from
impulsive sound sources like pile driving can range in severity from
effects such as behavioral disturbance to temporary or permanent
hearing impairment (Yelverton et al., 1973). Due to the nature of the
pile driving sounds
[[Page 42475]]
in the project, behavioral disturbance is the most likely effect from
the proposed activity. Marine mammals exposed to high intensity sound
repeatedly or for prolonged periods can experience hearing threshold
shifts. PTS constitutes injury, but TTS does not (Southall et al.,
2007). Based on the nature of the Port's activity and the anticipated
effectiveness of the mitigation measures (i.e., use of a bubble
curtain, wood cushion, and shutdown--discussed in detail below in the
Proposed Mitigation section), PTS is not anticipated. Therefore, the
Port is not requesting and NMFS is not proposing to authorize take by
Level A harassment related to this project.
The effects of sounds from pile driving, by impact or vibratory
means, pile removal, and down the hole drilling might include one or
more of the following: Temporary or permanent hearing impairment, non-
auditory physical or physiological effects, behavioral disturbance, and
masking (Richardson et al., 1995; Gordon et al., 2003; Nowacek et al.,
2007; Southall et al., 2007). The effects of pile driving and drilling
on marine mammals are dependent on several factors, including the type
and depth of the animal; the pile size and type, and the intensity and
duration of the pile driving sound; the substrate; the standoff
distance between the pile and the animal; and the sound propagation
properties of the environment. Impacts to marine mammals from pile
driving and pile removal activities are expected to result primarily
from acoustic pathways. As such, the degree of effect is intrinsically
related to the frequency, received level, and duration of the sound
exposure, which are in turn influenced by the distance between the
animal and the source. The further away from the source, the less
intense the exposure should be. The substrate and depth of the habitat
affect the sound propagation properties of the environment. In
addition, substrates that are soft (e.g., sand) would absorb or
attenuate the sound more readily than hard substrates (e.g., rock),
which may reflect the acoustic wave.
Responses to continuous sound, such as vibratory pile installation
or down the hole drilling, have not been documented as well as
responses to impulsive sounds. With both types of pile driving, it is
likely that the onset of pile driving could result in temporary, short-
term changes in an animal's typical behavior and/or avoidance of the
affected area. These behavioral changes may include, based on more
general observations of behavioral responses to sound exposure
(Richardson et al., 1995): Changing durations of surfacing and dives,
number of blows per surfacing, or moving direction and/or speed;
reduced/increased vocal activities; changing/cessation of certain
behavioral activities (such as socializing or feeding); visible startle
response or aggressive behavior (such as tail/fluke slapping or jaw
clapping); avoidance of areas where sound sources are located; and/or
flight responses (e.g., pinnipeds flushing into water from haulouts or
rookeries). Pinnipeds may increase their haul-out time, possibly to
avoid in-water disturbance (Thorson and Reyff 2006). If a marine mammal
responds to a stimulus by changing its behavior (e.g., through
relatively minor changes in locomotion direction/speed or vocalization
behavior), the response may or may not constitute taking at the
individual level, and is unlikely to affect the stock or the species as
a whole. However, if a sound source displaces marine mammals from an
important feeding or breeding area for a prolonged period, impacts on
animals, and if so potentially on the stock or species, could
potentially be significant (e.g., Lusseau and Bejder 2007; Weilgart
2007).
Natural and artificial sounds can disrupt behavior by masking. The
frequency range of the potentially masking sound is important in
determining any potential behavioral impacts. Because sound generated
from in-water pile driving and removal is mostly concentrated at low-
frequency ranges, it may have less effect on high frequency
echolocation sounds made by porpoises. The most intense underwater
sounds in the Port's proposed action are those produced by impact pile
driving. Given that the energy distribution of pile driving covers a
broad frequency spectrum, sound from these sources would likely be
within the audible range of marine mammals present in the project area.
Impact pile driving activity is relatively short-term, with rapid
impulsive sounds occurring for approximately 20 minutes per pile in
this project. The probability for impact pile driving resulting from
this proposed action masking acoustic signals important to the behavior
and survival of marine mammal species is low and if it occurred, it
would be for a short duration. Vibratory pile driving is also
relatively short-term, with rapid oscillations occurring for
approximately 20 minutes per pile in this project. It is possible that
vibratory pile driving resulting from this proposed action may mask
acoustic signals important to the behavior and survival of marine
mammal species, but the short-term duration and limited affected area
would result in insignificant impacts from masking.
Pinnipeds that occur near the project site could be exposed to
airborne sounds associated with pile driving and removal that have the
potential to cause behavioral harassment, depending on their distance
from pile driving activities. Cetaceans are not expected to be exposed
to airborne sounds that would result in harassment as defined under the
MMPA.
Airborne noise will primarily be an issue for pinnipeds that are
swimming or hauled out near the project site within the range of noise
levels elevated above the acoustic criteria. We recognize that
pinnipeds in the water could be exposed to airborne sound that may
result in behavioral harassment when looking with their heads above
water. Most likely, airborne sound would cause behavioral responses
similar to those discussed above in relation to underwater sound. For
instance, anthropogenic sound could cause hauled-out pinnipeds to
exhibit changes in their normal behavior, such as reduction in
vocalizations, or cause them to temporarily abandon the area and move
further from the source. However, these animals would likely previously
have been `taken' because of exposure to underwater sound above the
behavioral harassment thresholds, which are in all cases larger than
those associated with airborne sound. Thus, the behavioral harassment
of these animals by airborne sound is already accounted for in the
estimates of potential take from underwater exposure to pile driving
sounds. Therefore, we do not believe that authorization of additional
incidental take resulting from airborne sound for pinnipeds is
warranted, and airborne sound is not discussed further here.
Stress Responses
An animal's perception of a threat may be sufficient to trigger
stress responses consisting of some combination of behavioral
responses, autonomic nervous system responses, neuroendocrine
responses, or immune responses (e.g., Seyle 1950; Moberg 2000). In many
cases, an animal's first and sometimes most economical (in terms of
energetic costs) response is behavioral avoidance of the potential
stressor. Autonomic nervous system responses to stress typically
involve changes in heart rate, blood pressure, and gastrointestinal
activity. These responses have a relatively short duration and may or
may not have a significant long-term effect on an animal's fitness.
[[Page 42476]]
Neuroendocrine stress responses often involve the hypothalamus-
pituitary-adrenal system. Virtually all neuroendocrine functions that
are affected by stress--including immune competence, reproduction,
metabolism, and behavior--are regulated by pituitary hormones. Stress-
induced changes in the secretion of pituitary hormones have been
implicated in failed reproduction, altered metabolism, reduced immune
competence, and behavioral disturbance (e.g., Moberg 1987; Blecha
2000). Increases in the circulation of glucocorticoids are also equated
with stress (Romano et al., 2004).
The primary distinction between stress (which is adaptive and does
not normally place an animal at risk) and ``distress'' is the cost of
the response. During a stress response, an animal uses glycogen stores
that can be quickly replenished once the stress is alleviated. In such
circumstances, the cost of the stress response would not pose serious
fitness consequences. However, when an animal does not have sufficient
energy reserves to satisfy the energetic costs of a stress response,
energy resources must be diverted from other functions. This state of
distress will last until the animal replenishes its energetic reserves
sufficient to restore normal function.
Relationships between these physiological mechanisms, animal
behavior, and the costs of stress responses are well studied through
controlled experiments and for both laboratory and free-ranging animals
(e.g., Holberton et al., 1996; Hood et al., 1998; Jessop et al., 2003;
Krausman et al., 2004; Lankford et al., 2005). Stress responses due to
exposure to anthropogenic sounds or other stressors and their effects
on marine mammals have also been reviewed (Fair and Becker 2000; Romano
et al., 2002b) and, more rarely, studied in wild populations (e.g.,
Romano et al., 2002a). For example, Rolland et al. (2012) found that
noise reduction from reduced ship traffic in the Bay of Fundy was
associated with decreased stress in North Atlantic right whales. These
and other studies lead to a reasonable expectation that some marine
mammals will experience physiological stress responses upon exposure to
acoustic stressors and that it is possible that some of these would be
classified as ``distress.'' In addition, any animal experiencing TTS
would likely also experience stress responses (NRC, 2003).
Anticipated Effects on Habitat
The proposed activities at the project area would not result in
permanent negative impacts to habitats used directly by marine mammals,
but may have potential short-term impacts to food sources such as
forage fish and may affect acoustic habitat (see masking discussion
above). There are no known foraging hotspots or other ocean bottom
structure of significant biological importance to marine mammals
present in the marine waters of the project area during the
construction window. The project area is located in an industrial and
commercial shipping port. Therefore, the main impact issue associated
with the proposed activity would be temporarily elevated sound levels
and the associated direct effects on marine mammals, as discussed
previously in this document. The primary potential acoustic impacts to
marine mammal habitat are associated with elevated sound levels
produced by vibratory and impact pile driving, drilling, and sediment
removal in the area. However, other potential impacts to the
surrounding habitat from physical disturbance are also possible,
although this will be minimal since construction is occurring in an
already industrial and commercial shipping area.
In-Water Construction Effects on Potential Prey (Fish)
Construction activities would produce continuous (i.e., vibratory
pile driving, drilling) and impulsive (i.e., impact driving) sounds.
Fish react to sounds that are especially strong and/or intermittent
low-frequency sounds. Short duration, sharp sounds can cause overt or
subtle changes in fish behavior and local distribution. Hastings and
Popper (2005) identified several studies that suggest fish may relocate
to avoid certain areas of sound energy. Additional studies have
documented effects of pile driving on fish, although several are based
on studies in support of large, multiyear bridge construction projects
(e.g., Scholik and Yan 2001, 2002; Popper and Hastings 2009). Sound
impulsive sounds at received levels of 160 dB may cause subtle changes
in fish behavior. SPLs of 180 dB may cause noticeable changes in
behavior (Pearson et al., 1992; Skalski et al., 1992). SPLs of
sufficient strength have been known to cause injury to fish and fish
mortality.
The most likely impact to fish from pile driving and pile removal
activities at the Port's project area would be temporary behavioral
avoidance of the area. The duration of fish avoidance of this area
after pile driving stops is unknown, but a rapid return to normal
recruitment, distribution and behavior is anticipated. In general,
impacts to marine mammal prey species are expected to be minor and
temporary due to the short timeframe (15 days) for the project.
Pile Driving Effects on Potential Foraging Habitat
The area likely impacted by the project is relatively small
compared to the available habitat in the Mission Bay/Central Waterfront
area of San Francisco Bay. Avoidance by potential prey (i.e., fish) of
the immediate area due to the temporary loss of this foraging habitat
is also possible. The duration of fish avoidance of this area after
pile driving stops is unknown, but a rapid return to normal
recruitment, distribution and behavior is anticipated. Any behavioral
avoidance by fish of the disturbed area would still leave significantly
large areas of fish and marine mammal foraging habitat in the nearby
vicinity of the MBFL and WTL on San Francisco Bay.
The duration of the construction activities, including pile driving
and dredging is relatively short, estimated at 55 days. The
construction window for pile driving and drilling is a maximum of 15
days and each day, activities would only occur for a few hours during
the day. Impacts to habitat and prey are expected to be minimal based
on the short duration of activities.
In summary, given the short daily duration of sound associated with
individual pile driving and removal events and the relatively small
areas being affected, pile driving and pile removal activities
associated with the proposed action are not likely to have a permanent,
adverse effect on any fish habitat, or populations of fish species.
Thus, any impacts to marine mammal habitat are not expected to cause
significant or long-term consequences for individual marine mammals or
their populations.
Estimated Take
This section provides an estimate of the number of incidental takes
proposed for authorization through this IHA, which will inform both
NMFS' consideration of ``small numbers'' and the negligible impact
determination.
Harassment is the only type of take expected to result from these
activities. Except with respect to certain activities not pertinent
here, section 3(18) of the MMPA defines ``harassment'' as: any act of
pursuit, torment, or annoyance which (i) has the potential to injure a
marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild (Level A harassment);
or (ii) has the potential to disturb a marine mammal or marine mammal
stock in the wild by causing disruption of behavioral patterns,
including, but not limited to,
[[Page 42477]]
migration, breathing, nursing, breeding, feeding, or sheltering (Level
B harassment).
Authorized takes would be by Level B harassment only, in the form
of disruption of behavioral patterns for individual marine mammals
resulting from exposure to acoustic sources. Based on the nature of the
activity and the anticipated effectiveness of the mitigation measures
(i.e., use of a bubble curtain, wood cushion, and shutdown--discussed
in detail below in the Proposed Mitigation section), Level A harassment
is neither anticipated nor proposed to be authorized.
As described previously, no mortality is anticipated or proposed to
be authorized for this activity. Below we describe how the take is
estimated.
Generally speaking, we estimate take by considering: (1) Acoustic
thresholds above which NMFS believes the best available science
indicates marine mammals will be behaviorally harassed or incur some
degree of permanent hearing impairment; (2) the area or volume of water
that will be ensonified above these levels in a day; (3) the density or
occurrence of marine mammals within these ensonified areas; and, (4)
and the number of days of activities. We note that while these basic
factors can contribute to a basic calculation to provide an initial
prediction of takes, additional information that can qualitatively
inform take estimates is also sometimes available (e.g., previous
monitoring results or average group size). Below, we describe these
components in more detail and present the proposed take estimate.
Acoustic Thresholds
Using the best available science, NMFS has developed acoustic
thresholds that identify the received level of underwater sound above
which exposed marine mammals would be reasonably expected to be
behaviorally harassed (equated to Level B harassment) or to incur PTS
of some degree (equated to Level A harassment).
Level B Harassment for non-explosive sources--Though significantly
driven by received level, the onset of behavioral disturbance from
anthropogenic noise exposure is also informed to varying degrees by
other factors related to the source (e.g., frequency, predictability,
duty cycle), the environment (e.g., bathymetry), and the receiving
animals (hearing, motivation, experience, demography, behavioral
context) and can be difficult to predict (Southall et al., 2007,
Ellison et al., 2012). Based on what the available science indicates
and the practical need to use a threshold based on a factor that is
both predictable and measurable for most activities, NMFS uses a
generalized acoustic threshold based on received level to estimate the
onset of behavioral harassment. NMFS predicts that marine mammals are
likely to be behaviorally harassed in a manner we consider Level B
harassment when exposed to underwater anthropogenic noise above
received levels of 120 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) for continuous (e.g.
vibratory pile-driving, drilling) and above 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms)
for non-explosive impulsive (e.g., impact pile driving) sources.
The Port of San Francisco's proposed activity includes the use of
continuous (vibratory pile driving, down the hole drilling) and
impulsive (impact pile driving) sources, and therefore the 120 and 160
dB re 1 [mu]Pa (rms) thresholds are applicable.
Level A harassment for non-explosive sources--NMFS' Technical
Guidance for Assessing the Effects of Anthropogenic Sound on Marine
Mammal Hearing (Version 2.0) (NMFS, 2018) identifies dual criteria to
assess auditory injury (Level A harassment) to five different marine
mammal groups (based on hearing sensitivity) as a result of exposure to
noise from two different types of sources (impulsive or non-impulsive).
The Port of San Francisco's proposed activity includes the use of
impulsive (impact pile driving) and non-impulsive (vibratory pile
driving) sources.
These thresholds are provided in Table 3 below. The references,
analysis, and methodology used in the development of the thresholds are
described in NMFS's 2018 Technical Guidance, which may be accessed at:
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-acoustic-technical-guidance.
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
[[Page 42478]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN22AU18.000
BILLING CODE 3510-22-C
Ensonified Area
Here, we describe operational and environmental parameters of the
activity that will feed into identifying the area ensonified above the
acoustic thresholds, which include source levels and transmission loss
coefficients.
Reference sound source levels used by the Port of San Francisco for
all vibratory and impact piling/removal and drilling activities were
derived from source level data from construction projects within
Caltrans (2015) except for two cases noted below where Navy and Alaska
Department of Transportation sources were used. To determine the
ensonified areas for both the Level A and Level B harassment zones for
vibratory piling of the 36-inch, 30-inch, and 16-inch steel piles and
14-inch steel H piles, the Port of San Francisco used SPLs of 170 dB re
1 [mu]Pa rms, 170 dB re 1 [mu]Pa rms, 158 dB re 1 [mu]Pa rms, and 158
dB re 1 [mu]Pa rms, respectively. These were derived from vibratory
pile driving data of 36-inch (for 36-inch and 30-inch steel piles), 18-
inch (for 16-inch steel piles) and 14-inch (for 14-inch steel H-pile)
steel piles reported in the values listed in Table 1.2-2 and Table
1.2.3 of Caltrans (2015), and Table 6-1 of Navy (2017). For vibratory
pile removal, the Port of San Francisco used an SPL of 155 dB re 1
[mu]Pa rms. This proxy source level was derived from vibratory pile
driving data of 12-inch steel pipe piles in Caltrans (2015; Table 1.2-
2). In addition, for down the hole drilling activities used to place
24-inch octagonal concrete piles, an SPL of 168 dB was used,
corresponding to the mean SPL reported in Table 72 of the Alaska
Department of Transportation (2016) hydroacoustic report.
For impact pile driving, the Port of San Francisco used both SPLs
and Sound Exposure Levels (SEL) derived from summary source level
values reported in Caltrans (2015). These source levels were then
reduced by 7 dB due to the Port of San Francisco's use of a bubble
curtain. NMFS used a reduction value of 7 dB as it was roughly the
average sound reduction value derived from sound measurements of piles
that used bubble curtains within Caltrans (2015). For piling of 36-inch
steel piles, a source
[[Page 42479]]
level of 183 dB SEL was chosen as a proxy value for modeling Level A
harassment zones (Caltrans 2015, Table 1.2-1). This source level was
reduced to 176 dB SEL with the 7 dB reduction. For piling of 20-inch
concrete piles, a source level of 167 dB SEL was chosen as a proxy
value for modeling Level A harassment zones (Caltrans 2015, Table 1.5-
4, reported from 24-inch concrete pile measurements at a project in the
Port of Oakland). This source level was selected as a proxy because of
the proximity of the Port of Oakland project to the proposed work and
is more conservative than Caltrans (2015) summary value reported in
Table 1.2-1. This source level was reduced to 160 dB SEL with the 7 dB
reduction. In addition, for impact piling of 16-inch steel piles, a
source level of 158 dB SEL was chosen as a proxy value for modeling
Level A harassment zones (Joaquin River Project; Caltrans 2015, Table
1.2-3). This source level was reduced to 151 dB SEL with the 7 dB
reduction. The stated source levels and their corresponding activity
are presented in Table 4 below.
Table 4--Project Source Levels
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Activity Source level at 10 meters (dB)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Pile Driving/Removal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
36-inch steel pile installation......... 170 SPL
30-inch steel pile installation 170 SPL
(Caisson).
14-inch steel H pile installation....... 158 SPL
Removal of pre-existing piles........... 155 SPL
16-inch steel pile installation......... 158 SPL
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact Pile Driving *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
36-inch steel pile installation......... 176 SEL/186 SPL
20-inch concrete pile installation...... 160 SEL/172 SPL
16-inch steel pile installation......... 151 SEL/177 SPL
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Down the Hole Drilling
------------------------------------------------------------------------
24[hyphen]inch Octagonal Concrete 168 SPL
(drilling of 30-inch hole).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* The values in the cells reflect a 7dB reduction due to the Port of San
Francisco's use of a bubble curtain.
Level B Harassment Zones
The practical spreading model was used by the Port of San Francisco
to generate the Level B harassment zones for all piling/removal
activities. Practical spreading is described in full detail below.
Pile driving and drilling generates underwater noise that can
potentially result in disturbance to marine mammals in the project
area. Transmission loss (TL) is the decrease in acoustic intensity as
an acoustic pressure wave propagates out from a source. TL parameters
vary with frequency, temperature, sea conditions, current, source and
receiver depth, water depth, water chemistry, and bottom composition
and topography. The general formula for underwater TL is:
TL = B * log10 (R1/R2),
Where:
R1 = the distance of the modeled SPL from the driven pile, and
R2 = the distance from the driven pile of the initial measurement.
This formula neglects loss due to scattering and absorption, which is
assumed to be zero here. The degree to which underwater sound
propagates away from a sound source is dependent on a variety of
factors, most notably the water bathymetry and presence or absence of
reflective or absorptive conditions including in-water structures and
sediments. Spherical spreading occurs in a perfectly unobstructed
(free-field) environment not limited by depth or water surface,
resulting in a 6 dB reduction in sound level for each doubling of
distance from the source (20 * log[range]). Cylindrical spreading
occurs in an environment in which sound propagation is bounded by the
water surface and sea bottom, resulting in a reduction of 3 dB in sound
level for each doubling of distance from the source (10 * log[range]).
A practical spreading value of 15 is often used under conditions where
water increases with depth as the receiver moves away from the
shoreline, resulting in an expected propagation environment that would
lie between spherical and cylindrical spreading loss conditions.
Utilizing the practical spreading loss model, the Port of San
Francisco determined underwater noise will fall below the behavioral
effects threshold of 120 dB rms for marine mammals at a maximum radial
distance of 21,544 meters for vibratory piling and drilling (36 and 30-
inch steel piles; drilling for 24-inch octagonal concrete pile). The
maximum Level B harassment zone for this activity will therefore be set
at 21,544 meters. However, previous sound monitoring for other projects
in San Francisco Bay (i.e. Caltrans 2015; 2016) have shown background
sound levels in the active portions of the Bay, near the project area,
to range from 110 to 140 dB rms, with typical background levels in the
range of 110 to 120 dB rms. This ambient noise may affect the ability
to distinguish sound from vibratory pile driving in the region (Rodkin,
2009), but direct applicability of that finding to the Port's work is
unknown, and therefore no reduction in Level B harassment zone is
applied. The maximum radial distance of the Level B harassment zone for
impact pile driving equaled 541.2 meters (impact driving 36-inch steel
piles). At this radial distance, the entire Level B harassment zone for
impact piling equaled 0.3699 km\2\. This ensonified area is based on a
GIS map of the area accounting for structures and landmasses which
would block sound spreading (Please see Figure 9 of the Application).
Table 5 below provides all Level B radial distances and their
corresponding areas for each activity during the Port of San
Francisco's project. Level B harassment zone areas are calculated using
a GIS map (See Figure 9 of the Application).
Table 5--Level B Harassment Zones Calculated Using the Practical
Spreading Model
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Calculated Level B
distance to harassment
Source Level B zone (square
threshold kilometers
(meters) km\2\)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Pile Driving
------------------------------------------------------------------------
36-inch steel pile installation......... 21,544 47.1608
30-inch steel pile installation......... 21,544 47.1608
16-inch steel pile installation......... 21,544 47.1608
14-inch steel H pile installation....... 3,415 7.6431
Removal of pre-existing concrete and 2,154 3.1511
wood piles.............................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 42480]]
Impact Pile Driving
------------------------------------------------------------------------
36-inch steel pile installation......... 541.2 0.36993
20-inch concrete pile installation...... 63.1 0.006650
16-inch steel pile installation......... 215 0.074044
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Down the Hole Drilling
------------------------------------------------------------------------
21,544 47.1608
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level A Harassment Zones
When the NMFS Technical Guidance (2016) was published, in
recognition of the fact that the ensonified area could be more
technically challenging to predict because of the duration component in
the new thresholds, we developed a User Spreadsheet that includes tools
to help predict a simple isopleth that can be used in conjunction with
marine mammal density or occurrence to help predict takes. We note that
because of some of the assumptions included in the methods used for
these tools, we anticipate that isopleths produced are typically going
to be overestimates of some degree, which will result in some
overestimate of Level A harassment. However, these tools offer the best
way to predict appropriate isopleths when more sophisticated 3D
modeling methods are not available, and NMFS continues to develop ways
to quantitatively refine these tools, and will qualitatively address
the output where appropriate. For stationary sources (i.e. pile
driving), NMFS's User Spreadsheet predicts the closest distance at
which, if a marine mammal remained at that distance the whole duration
of the activity, it would not incur PTS. Inputs used in the User
Spreadsheet, and the resulting isopleths are reported below. Daily
ensonified areas for Level A harassment are approximated as a semi-
circle because the pile driving and drilling are occurring close to
shore and the coastline is approximately linear.
Table 6--Parameters of Pile Driving and Drilling Activity
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory pile Vibratory pile Vibratory pile Vibratory pile
Vibratory pile driver driver driver driver Impact pile Impact pile Impact pile Drilling (24-
Equipment type driver (removal (installation of (installation (installation (installation driver (36-inch driver (20-inch driver (16-inch inch octagonal
of concrete and 36-inch steel of 30-inch of 16-inch of 14-inch steel piles) concrete piles) steel piles) concrete pile)
wood piles) piles) steel piles) steel piles) steel H piles)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Spreadsheet Tab Used........... Non-impulsive, Non-impulsive, Non-impulsive, Non-impulsive, Non-impulsive, Impulsive, Non- Impulsive, Non- Impulsive, Non- Non-impulsive,
continuous. continuous. continuous. continuous. continuous. continuous. continuous. continuous. continuous.
Source Level................... 155 SPL......... 170 SPL......... 170 SPL........ 158 SPL........ 158 SPL........ 176 SEL.......... 160 SEL.......... 151 SEL.......... 168 SPL.
Weighting Factor Adjustment 2.5............. 2.5............. 2.5............ 2.5............ 2.5............ 2................ 2................ 2................ 2.
(kHz).
(a) Activity duration (hours) (a) 0.4......... (a) 0.33........ (a) 0.25....... (a) .33........ (a) 0.33....... (b) 150, (c) 4... (b) 500, (c) 4... (b) 500, (c) 2... (a) 6.
within 24 hours, (b) Number of
strikes per pile, (c) Number
of piles per day.
Propagation (xLogR)............ 15.............. 15.............. 15............. 15............. 15............. 15............... 15............... 15............... 15.
Distance of source level 10.............. 10.............. 10............. 10............. 10............. 10............... 10............... 10............... 10.
measurement (meters)+.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 7--Level A Harassment Zone Isopleth and Ensonified Area for Pile Driving and Drilling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PTS isopleth (meters)
-----------------------------------------------------------
Source type Low- Mid- High-
frequency frequency frequency Phocid Otariid
cetaceans cetaceans cetaceans pinnipeds pinnipeds
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Pile Driver (Removal of concrete and wood 1.5 0.1 2.2 0.9 0.1
piles).............................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 36-inch steel 13.1 1.2 19.3 7.9 0.6
piles).............................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 30-inch steel 10.8 1.0 16.0 6.6 0.5
piles).............................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 14-inch steel 2.1 0.2 3.0 1.3 0.1
H piles)...........................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 16-inch steel 2.1 0.2 3.0 1.3 0.1
H piles)...........................................
Impact Pile Driver (36-inch steel piles)............ 242.6 8.6 288.9 129.8 9.5
Impact Pile Driver (20-inch concrete piles)......... 46.4 1.7 55.3 24.8 1.8
Impact Pile Driver (16-inch steel piles)............ 7.3 0.3 8.8 3.9 0.3
Drilling (24-inch octagonal concrete pile).......... 6.3 0.4 5.5 3.4 0.2
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daily ensonified area (m)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Pile Driver (Removal of concrete and wood 3.5 0.02 7.6 1.3 0.02
piles).............................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 36-inch steel 270 2.3 585 98 0.6
piles).............................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 30-inch steel 183 1.6 402 68 0.4
piles).............................................
[[Page 42481]]
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 14-inch steel 6.9 0.06 14 2.7 0.02
H piles)...........................................
Vibratory Pile Driver (Installation of 16-inch steel 6.9 0.06 14 2.7 0.02
H piles)...........................................
Impact Pile Driver (36-inch steel piles)............ 92450 120 131100 26460 140
Impact Pile Driver (20-inch concrete piles)......... 3380 4.5 4800 966 5.1
Impact Pile Driver (16-inch steel piles)............ 84 0.1 120 24 0.1
Drilling (24-inch octagonal concrete pile).......... 62 0.3 48 18 0.06
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marine Mammal Occurrence
In this section we provide the information about the presence,
density, or group dynamics of marine mammals that will inform the take
calculations.
No systematic line transect surveys of marine mammals have been
performed in San Francisco Bay. Therefore, the in-water densities of
harbor seals, California sea lions, and harbor porpoises were
calculated based on 17 years of observations during monitoring for the
San Francisco Bay-Oakland Bay Bridge (SFOBB) construction and
demolition project (Caltrans 2018). Care was taken to eliminate
multiple observations of the same animal, although this can be
difficult and is likely that the same individual may have been counted
multiple times on the same day. The amount of monitoring performed per
year varied, depending on the frequency and duration of construction
activities with the potential to affect marine mammals. During the 257
days of monitoring from 2000 through 2017 (including 15 days of
baseline monitoring in 2003), 1,029 harbor seals, 83 California sea
lions, and 24 harbor porpoises were observed in waters in the project
vicinity in total. In 2015, 2016, and 2017, the number of harbor seals
in the project area increased significantly. In 2017, the number of
harbor porpoise in the project area also increased significantly.
Therefore, a harbor seal density estimate was calculated using the
2015-2017 data, and a harbor porpoise density estimate was calculated
using the 2017 data, which may better reflect the current use of the
project area by these animals. These observations included data from
baseline, pre-, during, and post-pile driving, mechanical dismantling,
on-shore blasting, and off-shore implosion activities.
Insufficient sighting data exist to estimate the density of
bottlenose dolphins. However, a single bottlenose dolphin has been
observed regularly near the project site. One individual was documented
regularly, through photo ID, over several months off the coast of the
former Alameda Air Station (Perlman 2017).
Insufficient sighting data exist to estimate elephant seal
densities in the Bay. Generally, only juvenile elephant seals enter the
Bay and do not remain long. The most recent sighting near the project
area was in 2012, on the beach at Clipper Cove on Treasure Island, when
a healthy yearling elephant seal hauled out for approximately 1 day.
Approximately 100 juvenile northern elephant seals strand in or near
the Bay each year, including individual strandings at YBI and Treasure
Island (less than 10 strandings per year).
In addition, insufficient sighting data exist to estimate northern
fur seal and gray whale densities in the Bay. Only two to four northern
fur seals strand in the Bay each year, and they are unlikely to occur
in the project area. Also, during the Caltrans Richmond-San Rafael
Bridge project, monitors recorded 12 living and two dead gray whales in
the surveys performed in 2012. All sightings were in either the Central
or North Bay, and all but two sightings occurred during the months of
April and May. One gray whale was sighted in June and one in October.
The Oceanic Society has tracked gray whale sightings since they began
returning to San Francisco Bay regularly in the late 1990s. Most
sightings occurred just a mile or two inside of the Golden Gate, with
some traveling into San Pablo Bay in the northern part of the San
Francisco Bay (Self 2012). The Oceanic Society data show that all age
classes of gray whales enter San Francisco Bay and they enter as
singles or in groups of up to five individuals (Winning 2008). It is
estimated that two to six gray whales enter San Francisco Bay in any
given year.
Numbers used for density calculations are shown in Table 8. These
numbers were calculated from observations in nearby waters of the San
Francisco Bay during San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge construction
conducted by Caltrans (Caltrans 2018). These observations occurred from
2000 to 2017 in a 2 km\2\ monitoring zone for California sea lions,
from 2015-2017 in a 2 km\2\ monitoring zone for harbor seals, and in
2017 in a 15 km\2\ zone for harbor porpoise. In the cases where
densities were refined to capture a narrower range of years to be
conservative, bold densities were used for take calculations.
Table 8--Estimated In-Water Density of Marine Mammal Species in San Francisco Bay Area
[Caltrans 2017]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area of Number of
Species observed monitoring Days of animals Density animals/km\2\
zone (km\2\) monitoring observed
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harbor Seals 2000-2017................ 2 257 1029 2.002.
Harbor Seals 2015-2017................ 2 47 372 3.957.
California Sea Lions 2000-2017........ 2 257 83 0.161.
Bottlenose Dolphins 2017.............. 2 6 2 Insufficient sighting
data exists to estimate
density.
Harbor Porpoise 2000-2017............. 3 257 24 0.031.
[[Page 42482]]
Harbor Porpoise 2017.................. 15 6 15 0.167.
Elephant Seal 2000-2017............... 2 257 0 Insufficient sighting
data exists to estimate
density.
Northern Fur Seal 2000-2017........... 2 257 0 Insufficient sighting
data exists to estimate
density.
Gray Whale 2000-2017.................. 2 257 0 Insufficient sighting
data exists to estimate
density.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
Densities for Pacific harbor seals, California sea lions, and harbor porpoises are based on monitoring for the
east span of the SFOBB from 2000 to 2017.
A second set of Pacific harbor seal densities were calculated from the increase in sightings recorded from 2015
to 2017.
A second set of harbor porpoise densities were calculated for the increase in sightings that were recorded in
2017.
Bold densities were used for take calculations.
Sources: CalTrans 2001, 2004b, 2013b, 2013c, 2014, 2015b, 2016, 2017; Perlman 2017.
For species without enough sightings to construct a density
estimate, we used information based on group size and frequency of
sightings from previous years of work to inform the number of animals
estimated to be taken, which is detailed in the Take Estimation section
below.
Take Calculation and Estimation
Here we describe how the information provided above is brought
together to produce a quantitative take estimate.
When density data was available, Level B take for the project was
calculated by multiplying the density times the largest Level B
harassment zone (km\2\) times the number of construction days. Since
density data was only available for harbor seals, harbor porpoises, and
California sea lions, these were the only species whose take was
calculated used this methodology. Table 9 shows the number of take
calculated for species with density and without density estimates. For
species without density information, information on average group size
of the species was used. This is discussed below Table 9.
Table 9--Take Estimates as a Percentage of Stock Abundance
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level B
Density animals/ harassment Construction Proposed Level Percentage of
Species km\2\ zone (km\2\) days \2\ B take stock
\1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harbor Seal................... 3.957........... 47.1608 15 2928 9.5
California Sea Lions.......... 0.161........... 47.1608 15 120 0.040
Harbor Porpoise............... 0.167........... 47.1608 15 124 1.3
Northern Elephant Seal........ Insufficient 47.1608 15 1 0.0006
sighting data
exists to
estimate
density.
Northern Fur Seal............. Insufficient 47.1608 15 1 0.0002
sighting data
exists to
estimate
density.
Gray Whale.................... Insufficient 47.1608 15 3 0.014
sighting data
exists to
estimate
density.
Bottlenose Dolphin............ Insufficient 47.1608 15 15 3.3
sighting data
exists to
estimate
density.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Represents area of largest Level B zone during pile driving/removal and drilling activities.
\2\ Total construction days for pile driving/removal and drilling.
Gray Whale
Gray whales occasionally enter San Francisco Bay during their
northward migration period of February and March. Pile driving and
drilling are not proposed to occur during this time and gray whales are
not likely to be present at other times of the year. It is estimated
that two to six gray whales enter the Bay in any given year, but they
are unlikely to be present during the work period (June 1 through
November 30). However, individual gray whales have occasionally been
observed in San Francisco Bay during the work period, and therefore it
is conservatively estimated that, at most, 3 gray whales, or one
average sized group, may be exposed to Level B harassment during the 15
days of pile driving/drilling.
Bottlenose Dolphin
When bottlenose dolphins are present in San Francisco Bay, they are
more typically found close to the Golden Gate. Recently, beginning in
2015, two individuals have been observed frequently in the vicinity of
Oyster Point (GGCR 2016, 2017; Perlman 2017) and one individual has
been observed near Alameda (GGCR 2016). Observations of bottlenose
dolphins are primarily west of Treasure Island and concentrated along
the nearshore areas of San Francisco south to Redwood City (Caltrans
2018). Bottlenose dolphins rarely occur in San Francisco Bay, but given
the size of the Level B harassment zone NMFS is proposing to authorize
take of 15 bottlenose dolphins by level B harassment.
[[Page 42483]]
Northern Fur Seal
Observations of northern fur seals are too few to establish a
density for this species in San Francisco Bay. The Marine Mammal Center
(TMMC) reported only two to four northern fur seal strandings in the
Bay in 2015 and 2016 (in Marin, San Francisco, and Santa Clara
counties) (TMMC 2017). To account for the possible rare presence of the
species in the action area, NMFS proposes to authorize one level B take
of northern fur seal.
Northern Elephant Seal
Elephant seals breed between December and March and have been
rarely cited in San Francisco Bay. It is anticipated that if an
elephant seal is encountered at all during pile driving or drilling it
would be a juvenile. To account for the possible rare presence of the
species in the action area, NMFS proposed to authorize one level B take
of elephant seal.
Level A Harassment
High frequency cetaceans (including harbor porpoise) have the
largest Level A harassment zone resulting from this project as shown in
Table 7. Estimated take by Level A harassment for harbor porpoise,
based on density reported in Table 8 and the Level A harassment zone,
is less than one individual (Density * Days * Ensonified Area). Given
the required mitigation measures, including shutdown zones which exceed
the Level A harassment zone, NMFS proposes no authorization of Level A
harassment for harbor porpoise or any marine mammal.
Proposed Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA,
NMFS must set forth the permissible methods of taking pursuant to such
activity, and other means of effecting the least practicable impact on
such species or stock and its habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of such species or stock for taking for certain
subsistence uses (latter not applicable for this action). NMFS
regulations require applicants for incidental take authorizations to
include information about the availability and feasibility (economic
and technological) of equipment, methods, and manner of conducting such
activity or other means of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact upon the affected species or stocks and their habitat (50 CFR
216.104(a)(11)).
In evaluating how mitigation may or may not be appropriate to
ensure the least practicable adverse impact on species or stocks and
their habitat, as well as subsistence uses where applicable, we
carefully consider two primary factors:
(1) The manner in which, and the degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure(s) is expected to reduce impacts to
marine mammals, marine mammal species or stocks, and their habitat.
This considers the nature of the potential adverse impact being
mitigated (likelihood, scope, range). It further considers the
likelihood that the measure will be effective if implemented
(probability of accomplishing the mitigating result if implemented as
planned) the likelihood of effective implementation (probability
implemented as planned); and
(2) The practicability of the measures for applicant
implementation, which may consider such things as cost, impact on
operations.
In addition to the specific measures described later in this
section, the Port must conduct briefings for construction supervisors
and crews, the monitoring team, and Port staff prior to the start of
all pile driving activity, and when new personnel join the work, in
order to explain responsibilities, communication procedures, the marine
mammal monitoring protocol, and operational procedures.
Timing Restrictions
All work will be conducted during daylight hours. If poor
environmental conditions restrict full visibility of the shutdown zone,
pile installation would be delayed.
Sound Attenuation
Sound attenuation methods will be implemented for the duration of
impact pile driving to install 36[hyphen]inch and 16[hyphen]inch steel
and 20[hyphen]inch concrete piles (i.e., cushion block, bubble curtain,
sleeve etc.) and shall implement the following bubble curtain
performance standards:
The bubble curtain must distribute air bubbles around 100
percent of the piling perimeter for the full depth of the water column.
The lowest bubble ring shall be in contact with the
mudline for the full circumference of the ring, and the weights
attached to the bottom ring shall ensure 100 percent mudline contact.
No parts of the ring or other objects shall prevent full mudline
contact.
The selected contractor will ensure that personnel are
trained in the proper balancing of air flow to the bubblers and shall
require that construction contractors submit an inspection/performance
report for approval by the Port within 72 hours following the
performance test. Corrections to the attenuation device to meet the
performance standards shall occur prior to impact driving.
Shutdown Zone for In-Water Heavy Machinery Work
For in-water heavy machinery work (using, e.g., standard barges,
tug boats, barge-mounted excavators, or clamshell equipment used to
place or remove material), a minimum 10 meter shutdown zone shall be
implemented. If a marine mammal comes within 10 meters of such
operations, operations shall cease and vessels shall reduce speed to
the minimum level required to maintain steerage and safe working
conditions. This type of work could include (but is not limited to) the
following activities: (1) Vibratory pile driving; (2) movement of the
barge to the pile location; (3) positioning of the pile on the
substrate via a crane (i.e., stabbing the pile); or (4) removal of the
pile from the water column/substrate via a crane (i.e., deadpull).
Additional Shutdown Zones
For all pile driving/removal and drilling activities, The Port of
San Francisco will establish a shutdown zone for a marine mammal
species that is greater than its corresponding Level A harassment zone.
The purpose of a shutdown zone is generally to define an area within
which shutdown of the activity would occur upon sighting of a marine
mammal (or in anticipation of an animal entering the defined area). The
shutdown zones for each of the pile driving and drilling activities are
listed below in Table 10.
[[Page 42484]]
Table 10--Shutdown Zones
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shutdown zones (meters)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
High-
Low- frequency Mid- frequency frequency
Source cetaceans cetaceans cetaceans
(humpback (Pacific- (Dall's Phocid (harbor Otariid (sea
whale, minke white sided porpoise, seal) lion)
whale) dolphin) harbor
porpoise)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In-Water Construction Activities *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Water Heavy Construction 10 10 10 10 10
(i.e., Barge movements, pile
positioning, deadpulling, and
sound attenuation).............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Pile Driving
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Pile Driver (Removal 10 10 10 10 10
of concrete and wood piles)....
Vibratory Pile Driver 10 10 10 10 10
(Installation of 14-inch steel
H piles).......................
Vibratory Pile Driver 10 10 10 10 10
(Installation of 16-inch steel
H piles).......................
Vibratory Pile Driver 25 10 25 10 10
(Installation of 30-inch steel
piles).........................
Vibratory Pile Driver 25 10 25 10 10
(Installation of 36-inch steel
piles).........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact Pile Driving
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact Pile Driver (16-inch 125 10 150 75 10
steel piles)...................
Impact Pile Driver (20-inch 75 10 75 30 10
concrete piles)................
Impact Pile Driver (36-inch 250 25 300 150 25
steel piles)...................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Drilling
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
24-inch concrete pile (1 pile) 10 10 10 10 10
(3 hours per day on 1 day).....
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Monitoring Zones
The Port of San Francisco will establish and observe a monitoring
zone. The monitoring zones for this project will differ based on
activity. For vibratory pile driving and down the hole drilling, it may
not be possible to observe the entire Level B harassment zones (areas
where SPLs are equal to or exceed 120 dB rms) due to their size. The
Port is expected to monitor and record observations in the largest
reasonable portion of this Level B harassment zone based on the number
of observers and visibility, but conditions may require efforts to be
focused in a smaller monitoring zone. For impact pile driving, the
monitoring zones are areas where SPLs are equal to or exceed 160 dB
rms. For vibratory pile driving/drilling and impact pile driving the
Level B Harassment zones are presented in Table 11 below. For the
vibratory pile driving and drilling activities, it is noted that Level
B harassment zone radius and area will not necessarily equal the
monitoring zone. These zones provide utility for monitoring conducted
for mitigation purposes (i.e., shutdown zone monitoring) by
establishing monitoring protocols for areas adjacent to the shutdown
zones. Monitoring of disturbance zones enables observers to be aware of
and communicate the presence of marine mammals in the project area, but
outside the shutdown zone, and thus prepare for potential shutdowns of
activity. However, the primary purpose of disturbance zone monitoring
is for documenting instances of Level B harassment; disturbance zone
monitoring is discussed in detail later (see Monitoring and Reporting).
Table 11--Monitoring Zones
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Radial
distance to Level B
Source Level B harassment
threshold zone (km\2\)
(meters)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Pile Driving
------------------------------------------------------------------------
36-inch steel pile installation......... * 21,544 * 47.1608
30-inch steel pile installation......... * 21,544 * 47.1608
16-inch steel pile installation......... * 21,544 * 47.1608
14-inch steel H pile installation....... * 3,415 * 7.6431
Removal of pre-existing concrete and * 21,544 * 47.1608
wood piles.............................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact Pile Driving
------------------------------------------------------------------------
36-inch steel pile installation......... 541.2 0.3699
20-inch concrete pile installation...... 63.1 0.006650
[[Page 42485]]
16-inch steel pile installation......... 215 0.074044
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Down the Hole Drilling
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* 21,544 * 47.1608
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* The monitored radius and area of the Level B harassment zone may vary
based on visibility.
Non-Authorized Take Prohibited
If a species enters or approaches the Level B harassment zone and
that species is either not authorized for take or its authorized takes
are met, pile driving, pile removal, and drilling activities must shut
down immediately using delay and shut-down procedures. Activities must
not resume until the animal has been confirmed to have left the area or
an observation time period of 15 minutes has elapsed.
Soft Start
The use of a soft-start procedure is believed to provide additional
protection to marine mammals by providing warning and/or giving marine
mammals a chance to leave the area prior to the impact hammer operating
at full capacity. For impact pile driving, contractors will be required
to provide an initial set of strikes from the hammer at 40 percent
energy, each strike followed by no less than a 30-second waiting
period. This procedure will be conducted a total of three times before
impact pile driving begins. This soft start procedure must be
implemented at the start of a day's impact pile driving and at any time
following cessation of impact driving of 30 minutes or greater. Soft
start is not required during vibratory pile driving/removal or drilling
activities.
Pre-Activity Monitoring
Prior to the start of daily in-water construction activity, or
whenever a break in pile driving or drilling of 30 minutes or longer
occurs, the observer will observe the shutdown and monitoring zones for
a period of 30 minutes. The shutdown zone will be cleared when a marine
mammal has not been observed within the zone for that 30-minute period.
A determination that the shutdown zone is clear must be made during a
period of good visibility (i.e., the entire shutdown zone and
surrounding waters must be visible to the naked eye). If a marine
mammal is observed within the shutdown zone, a soft-start cannot
proceed until the animal has left the zone or has not been observed for
15 minutes. If the monitoring zone has been observed for 30 minutes and
non-permitted species are not present within the zone, soft start
procedures can commence and work can continue even if visibility
becomes impaired within the monitoring zone. When a marine mammal
permitted for Level B take is present in the monitoring zone, pile
driving, pile removal, and drilling activities may begin and Level B
take will be recorded. As stated above, if the entire Level B zone is
not visible at the start of construction, piling or drilling activities
can begin. If work ceases for more than 30 minutes, the pre-activity
monitoring of both the monitoring zone and shutdown zone will commence.
Based on our evaluation of the applicant's proposed measures, as
well as other measures considered by NMFS, NMFS has preliminarily
determined that the proposed mitigation measures provide the means
effecting the least practicable impact on the affected species or
stocks and their habitat, paying particular attention to rookeries,
mating grounds, and areas of similar significance.
Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA for an activity, Section 101(a)(5)(D) of
the MMPA states that NMFS must set forth, requirements pertaining to
the monitoring and reporting of such taking. The MMPA implementing
regulations at 50 CFR 216.104(a)(13) indicate that requests for
authorizations must include the suggested means of accomplishing the
necessary monitoring and reporting that will result in increased
knowledge of the species and of the level of taking or impacts on
populations of marine mammals that are expected to be present in the
proposed action area. Effective reporting is critical both to
compliance as well as ensuring that the most value is obtained from the
required monitoring.
Monitoring and reporting requirements prescribed by NMFS should
contribute to improved understanding of one or more of the following:
Occurrence of marine mammal species or stocks in the area
in which take is anticipated (e.g., presence, abundance, distribution,
density);
Nature, scope, or context of likely marine mammal exposure
to potential stressors/impacts (individual or cumulative, acute or
chronic), through better understanding of: (1) Action or environment
(e.g., source characterization, propagation, ambient noise); (2)
affected species (e.g., life history, dive patterns); (3) co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the action; or (4) biological or
behavioral context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or feeding areas);
Individual marine mammal responses (behavioral or
physiological) to acoustic stressors (acute, chronic, or cumulative),
other stressors, or cumulative impacts from multiple stressors;
How anticipated responses to stressors impact either: (1)
Long-term fitness and survival of individual marine mammals; or (2)
populations, species, or stocks;
Effects on marine mammal habitat (e.g., marine mammal prey
species, acoustic habitat, or other important physical components of
marine mammal habitat); and
Mitigation and monitoring effectiveness.
Hydroacoustic Monitoring
The Port recognizes in their application the need to implement a
sound monitoring plan (SMP) as required by the Regional NMFS and U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers programmatic review for pile driving activities
in San Francisco Bay. The Port indicates that this SMP will recommend
sound monitoring stations at 10 m, 100 m, and 300 m to monitor ambient
noise conditions in the area. NMFS feels that ambient noise
measurements are highly specific to the time and place they were taken,
and therefore might have limited
[[Page 42486]]
use to future projects. However, there are few source level
measurements for down the hole drilling activities, as shown by the use
of Alaska DOT proxy data in this IHA. NMFS feels that rigorous
hydroacoustic monitoring of source level for the down the hole drilling
activity will be more beneficial for future projects in this region and
others. While NMFS is not requiring these source level measurements, if
the Port were already planning to conduct measurements, we recommend
focusing on source level verification and could offer guidance on its
implementation.
Visual Monitoring
Monitoring would be conducted 30 minutes before, during, and 30
minutes after all pile driving/removal and drilling activities. In
addition, observers shall record all incidents of marine mammal
occurrence, regardless of distance from activity, and shall document
any behavioral reactions in concert with distance from piles being
driven, removed, or pile holes being drilled. Pile driving and drilling
activities include the time to install, remove, or drill a hole for a
single pile or series of piles, as long as the time elapsed between
uses of the pile driving equipment is no more than thirty minutes.
Monitoring will be conducted by NMFS approved Protected Species
Observers (PSOs). There will be at least two PSOs, but this number
could be higher, depending on the type of pile driving/drilling and
size of pile, which determines the size of the harassment zones. At
least two land-based PSOs will monitor during all pile driving/removal
and drilling activities.
PSOs shall scan the waters using binoculars, and/or spotting
scopes, and shall use a handheld GPS or range-finder device to verify
the distance to each sighting from the project site. All PSOs shall be
trained in marine mammal identification and behaviors and are required
to have no other project-related tasks while conducting monitoring. In
addition, monitoring shall be conducted by qualified observers, who
shall be placed at the best vantage point(s) practicable to monitor for
marine mammals and implement shutdown/delay procedures when applicable
by calling for the shutdown to the hammer operator. Qualified observers
are trained and/or experienced professionals, with the following
minimum qualifications:
i. At least one PSO must have prior experience working as a marine
mammal observer during construction activities;
Independent observers (i.e., not construction personnel);
ii. Other PSOs may substitute education (degree in biological
science or related field) or training for experience;
iii. Where a team of three or more PSOs are required, a lead
observer or monitoring coordinator shall be designated. The lead
observer must have prior experience working as a marine mammal observer
during construction;
iv. The Port of San Francisco shall submit PSO CVs for approval by
NMFS; The Port of San Francisco shall ensure that observers have the
following additional qualifications:
Visual acuity in both eyes (correction is permissible)
sufficient for discernment of moving targets at the water's surface
with ability to estimate target size and distance; use of binoculars
may be necessary to correctly identify the target;
Ability to conduct field observations and collect data
according to assigned protocols;
Experience or training in the field identification of
marine mammals, including the identification of behaviors;
Writing skills sufficient to prepare a report of
observations including but not limited to the number and species of
marine mammals observed; dates and times when in-water construction
activities were conducted; dates, times, and reason for implementation
of mitigation (or why mitigation was not implemented when required);
and marine mammal behavior;
Ability to communicate orally, by radio or in person, with
project personnel to provide real-time information on marine mammals
observed in the area as necessary; and
Sufficient training, orientation, or experience with the
construction operations to provide for personal safety during
observations.
The Port of San Francisco shall submit a draft report to NMFS not
later than 90 days following the end of construction activities. The
Port of San Francisco shall provide a final report within 30 days
following resolution of NMFS' comments on the draft report. Reports
shall contain, at minimum, the following:
Date and time that monitored activity begins and ends for
each day conducted (monitoring period);
Construction activities occurring during each daily
observation period, including how many and what type of piles driven;
Deviation from initial proposal in pile numbers, pile
types, average driving times, etc.;
Weather parameters in each monitoring period (e.g., wind
speed, percent cloud cover, visibility);
Water conditions in each monitoring period (e.g., sea
state, tide state);
Extrapolated estimates of the total observed Level B
harassment takes based on the percentage of the Level B harassment zone
that was not visible or was not monitored
For each marine mammal sighting:
[cir] Species, numbers, and, if possible, sex and age class of
marine mammals;
[cir] Description of any observable marine mammal behavior
patterns, including bearing and direction of travel and distance from
pile driving activity;
[cir] Location and distance from pile driving activities to marine
mammals and distance from the marine mammals to the observation point;
[cir] Estimated amount of time that the animals remained in the
Level B harassment zone;
[cir] Description of implementation of mitigation measures within
each monitoring period (e.g., shutdown or delay);
[cir] Other human activity in the area within each monitoring
period; and
[cir] A summary of the following:
[ssquf] Total number of individuals of each species detected within
the monitoring zone, and estimated as taken if correction factor
appropriate;
[ssquf] Total number of individuals of each species detected within
the Level A harassment zone and the average amount of time that they
remained in that zone; and
[ssquf] Daily average number of individuals of each species
(differentiated by month as appropriate) detected within the monitoring
zone, and estimated as taken, if appropriate.
Negligible Impact Analysis and Determination
NMFS has defined negligible impact as an impact resulting from the
specified activity that cannot be reasonably expected to, and is not
reasonably likely to, adversely affect the species or stock through
effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival (50 CFR 216.103). A
negligible impact finding is based on the lack of likely adverse
effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival (i.e., population-
level effects). An estimate of the number of takes alone is not enough
information on which to base an impact determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of marine mammals that might be
``taken'' through harassment, NMFS considers other factors, such as the
likely nature of any responses (e.g., intensity,
[[Page 42487]]
duration), the context of any responses (e.g., critical reproductive
time or location, migration), as well as effects on habitat, and the
likely effectiveness of the mitigation. We also assess the number,
intensity, and context of estimated takes by evaluating this
information relative to population status. Consistent with the 1989
preamble for NMFS's implementing regulations (54 FR 40338; September
29, 1989), the impacts from other past and ongoing anthropogenic
activities are incorporated into this analysis via their impacts on the
environmental baseline (e.g., as reflected in the regulatory status of
the species, population size and growth rate where known, ongoing
sources of human-caused mortality, or ambient noise levels).
As stated in the mitigation section, bubble curtains will be used
and shutdown zones that encompass the area in which Level A harassment
might be expected to occur will be implemented. As a result, no Level A
take is expected nor authorized for this activity. Exposures to
elevated sound levels produced during pile driving activities may cause
behavioral responses by an animal, but they are expected to be mild and
temporary. Effects on individuals that are taken by Level B harassment,
on the basis of reports in the literature as well as monitoring from
other similar activities, will likely be limited to reactions such as
increased swimming speeds, increased surfacing time, or decreased
foraging (if such activity were occurring) (e.g., Thorson and Reyff,
2006; Lerma, 2014). Most likely, individuals will simply move away from
the sound source and be temporarily displaced from the areas of pile
driving, although even this reaction has been observed primarily only
in association with impact pile driving. These reactions and behavioral
changes are expected to subside quickly when the exposures cease.
Within the project area, there are no critical habitats or other
biologically important areas (Calambokidis et al., 2015). The area is
an active commercial port, and while harbor seals, California sea
lions, and other marine mammals may be present, the area is not an
established rookery or breeding ground for local populations.
During all impact driving, implementation of soft start procedures,
the use of a bubble curtain, and monitoring of established shutdown
zones will be required. Given sufficient notice through use of soft
start (for impact driving), marine mammals are expected to move away
from an irritating sound source prior to it becoming potentially
injurious. In addition, PSOs will be stationed within the action area
whenever pile driving/removal and drilling operations are underway.
Depending on the activity, The Port of San Francisco will employ the
use of at least two PSOs to ensure all monitoring and shutdown zones
are properly observed.
Although the Mission Bay Ferry and Water Taxi Landing Project would
have some permanent removal of habitat available to marine mammals, the
area lost would negligible. Construction of the MBFL and WTL structures
and dredging for the project will result in the disturbance of up to
approximately 8.4 acres of predominantly fine[hyphen]grained sediment
and the associated benthic infaunal community. Total habitat disturbed
from the project activities is estimated at 0.000071 percent of the
total South San Francisco Bay subtidal habitat available (NOAA 2007).
This is a relatively small fraction of area relative to the total
available habitat for foraging and transit for marine mammals. In
addition, to minimize impacts, in[hyphen]water construction will be
limited to locally established environmental work windows between June
and November.
Overall, impacts to marine mammals and prey species due to the
Mission Bay Ferry and Water Taxi Landing Project are expected to be
minor and temporary. The area impacted by the project is very small
compared to the available habitat around San Francisco Bay. The most
likely impact to prey will be temporary behavioral avoidance of the
immediate area. During pile driving and drilling, it is expected that
fish and marine mammals would temporarily move to nearby locations and
return to the area following cessation of in-water construction
activities. Therefore, indirect effects on marine mammal prey during
the construction are not expected to be substantial.
In summary and as described above, the following factors primarily
support our determination that the impacts resulting from this activity
are not expected to adversely affect the species or stock through
effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival:
Mortality is not anticipated or authorized;
Minimal impacts to marine mammal habitat are expected;
Bubble curtain and other sound attenuating devices are
used during impact pile driving will lessen the amount of behavioral
disturbance and contribute to the alleviation of the likelihood of
injury;
Impacts are not occurring in rookeries, or known areas or
features of special significance for foraging or reproduction in the
project area;
Anticipated incidents of Level B harassment consist of, at
worst, temporary modifications in behavior; and
Required mitigation measures (i.e. shutdown zones) are
expected to be effective in reducing the effects of the specified
activity.
Based on the analysis contained herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the monitoring and mitigation
measures, NMFS preliminarily finds that the total marine mammal take
from the activity will have a negligible impact on all affected marine
mammal species or stocks.
Small Numbers
As noted above, only small numbers of incidental take may be
authorized under Section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA for specified
activities other than military readiness activities. The MMPA does not
define small numbers and so, in practice, where estimated numbers are
available, NMFS compares the number of individuals taken to the most
appropriate estimation of abundance of the relevant species or stock in
our determination of whether an authorization is limited to small
numbers of marine mammals. Additionally, other qualitative factors may
be considered in the analysis, such as the temporal or spatial scale of
the activities.
Take for all species authorized except harbor seal is less than
five percent of their respective stock abundance. For harbor seal, the
authorized take is less than 10 percent of the stock abundance. Based
on this and the analysis contained herein of the proposed activity
(including the proposed mitigation and monitoring measures) and the
anticipated take of marine mammals, NMFS preliminarily finds that small
numbers of marine mammals will be taken relative to the population size
of the affected species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis and Determination
There are no relevant subsistence uses of the affected marine
mammal stocks or species implicated by this action. Therefore, NMFS has
determined that the total taking of affected species or stocks would
not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the availability of such
species or stocks for taking for subsistence purposes.
[[Page 42488]]
Endangered Species Act (ESA)
No incidental take of ESA-listed species is proposed for
authorization or expected to result from this activity. Therefore, NMFS
has determined that formal consultation under section 7 of the ESA is
not required for this action.
Proposed Authorization
As a result of these preliminary determinations, NMFS proposes to
issue an IHA to the Port of San Francisco for conducting pile driving/
removal and drilling in San Francisco Bay from June 1, 2019 to May 31,
2020, provided the previously mentioned mitigation, monitoring, and
reporting requirements are incorporated. This section contains a draft
of the IHA itself. The wording contained in this section is proposed
for inclusion in the IHA (if issued).
1. This Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) is valid from
June 1, 2019, to May 31, 2020.
2. This IHA is valid only for impact pile driving, vibratory pile
driving, vibratory pile removal, and drilling activities associated
with the construction of the Mission Bay Ferry and Water Taxi Landing
Project in San Francisco Bay, California
3. General Conditions
(a) A copy of this IHA must be in the possession of the Port of San
Francisco, its designees, and work crew personnel operating under the
authority of this IHA;
(b) The species authorized for taking are gray whale (Eschrichtius
robustus), bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus), harbor porpoise
(Phocoena phocoena), California sea lion (Zalophus californianus),
northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus), Pacific harbor seal (Phoca
vitulina richardii), and northern elephant seal (Mirounga
angustirostris);
(c) The taking, by Level B harassment only, is limited to the
species listed in condition 3(b). See Table 9 for numbers of take
authorized;
(d) The taking by serious injury or death of any of the species
listed in condition 3(b) of the Authorization or any taking of any
other species of marine mammal is prohibited and may result in the
modification, suspension, or revocation of this IHA;
(e) The Port of San Francisco must conduct briefings between
construction supervisors and crews and marine mammal monitoring team
prior to the start of all pile driving, pile removal, and drilling, and
when new personnel join the work, in order to explain responsibilities,
communication procedures, marine mammal monitoring protocol, and
operational procedures; and
(f) Pile driving and drilling activities authorized under this IHA
may only occur during daylight hours.
4. Mitigation Measures
The holder of this Authorization is required to implement the
following mitigation measures:
(a) For all pile driving/removal, drilling, and in-water heavy
machinery work, the Port of San Francisco must implement a shutdown
zone around the pile or work zone. If a marine mammal comes within or
approaches the shutdown zone, such operations must cease. See Table 10
for minimum radial distances required for shutdown zones;
(b) After a shutdown occurs, impact pile driving, vibratory piling
driving/removal, and/or drilling can only begin after the animal is
observed leaving the shutdown zone or has not been observed for 15
minutes;
(c) The Port of San Francisco must use sound attenuation devices
(i.e. cushion block, and bubble curtain) during all impact pile driving
and a caisson sleeve during drilling. The Port of San Francisco must
implement the following bubble curtain performance standards:
(1) The bubble curtain must distribute air bubbles around 100
percent of the piling perimeter for the full depth of the water column;
(2) The lowest bubble ring must be in contact with the mudline for
the full circumference of the ring, and the weights attached to the
bottom ring must ensure 100 percent mudline contact. No parts of the
ring or other objects shall prevent full mudline contact; and
(3) The selected contractor must ensure that personnel are trained
in the proper balancing of air flow to the bubblers and must require
that construction contractors submit an inspection/performance report
for approval by the Port within 72 hours following the performance
test. Corrections to the attenuation device to meet the performance
standards must occur prior to impact driving;
(d) The Port of San Francisco must use a soft-start procedure for
impact pile driving. During a soft start, The Port of San Francisco is
required to provide an initial set of three strikes from the impact
hammer at 40 percent energy, followed by a 30-second waiting period,
then two subsequent 3-strike sets. This soft-start must be applied
prior to beginning pile driving activities each day or when impact pile
driving hammers have been idle for more than 30 minutes;
(e) If a species enters or approaches the Level B harassment zone
and that species is either not authorized for take or its authorized
takes are met, pile driving and removal activities must shut down
immediately using delay and shut-down procedures; and
(f) The Port of San Francisco must establish monitoring locations
as described below.
5. Monitoring
The holder of this Authorization is required to conduct marine
mammal monitoring during all pile driving/removal and drilling
activities. Monitoring and reporting must be conducted in accordance
with the Monitoring Plan as described below.
(a) The Port of San Francisco must monitor the Level B harassment
zones and shutdown zones shown in Tables 10 and 11 during all pile
driving/removal and drilling activities. Monitoring efforts in the
Level B harassment zone can be concentrated in a subset of the zone if
it is not feasible to observe the entire zone.
(b) If waters exceed a sea-state which restricts the observers'
ability to make observations within the marine mammal shutdown zone,
pile installation/removal and drilling must cease. Pile driving and/or
drilling must not be initiated or continue until the entire largest
shutdown zone for the activity is visible.
(c) Prior to the start of daily in-water construction activity, or
whenever a break in pile driving/removal and/or drilling of 30 minutes
or longer occurs, the PSOs must observe the shutdown and monitoring
zones for a period of 30 minutes before construction activities can
begin.
(d) If the shutdown zones have been observed to be clear of marine
mammals for 30 minutes, in-water construction can commence and work can
continue even if visibility becomes impaired within the Level B
harassment zone.
(e) Monitoring must be conducted by qualified PSOs, with minimum
qualifications as described previously in the Monitoring and Reporting
section of the proposed Federal Notice. PSO requirements include:
(i) At least two PSOs must be on site to actively observe the
shutdown and disturbance zones during all pile driving, removal, and
drilling;
(ii) Observers must use their naked eye with the aid of binoculars,
and/or a spotting scope during all pile driving and extraction
activities;
(iii) All PSOs must be positioned in the best vantage point to have
an unobstructed view of all water within the shutdown zone and as much
of the Level B harassment zone as possible for pile driving/removal
and/or drilling;
(iv) Observers must be independent (i.e., not construction
personnel);
[[Page 42489]]
(v) At least one PSO must have prior experience working as a marine
mammal observer during construction activities;
(vi) (Other PSOs may substitute education (degree in biological
science or related field) or training for experience;
(vii) Where a team of three or more PSOs are required, a lead
observer or monitoring coordinator shall be designated. The lead
observer must have prior experience working as a marine mammal observer
during construction;
(viii) The Port of San Francisco shall submit PSO CVs for approval
by NMFS;
(f) Marine mammal location must be determined using a rangefinder
and a GPS or compass;
(g) Post-construction monitoring must be conducted for 30 minutes
beyond the cessation of piling and drilling activities at end of day.
6. Reporting
The holder of this Authorization is required to:
(a) Submit a draft report on all monitoring conducted under the IHA
within 90 calendar days of the completion of marine mammal monitoring.
This report must detail the monitoring protocol, summarize the data
recorded during monitoring, and estimate the number of marine mammals
that may have been harassed, including the total number extrapolated
from observed animals across the entirety of relevant monitoring zones.
Given that the entire Level B harassment zone may not be readily
observable, takes must be recorded and extrapolated based upon the
amount of total observed takes and the percentage of the Level B
harassment zone that was not visible.
A final report must be prepared and submitted within 30 days
following resolution of comments on the draft report from NMFS. This
report must contain the following:
(i) Date and time a monitored activity begins or ends;
(ii) Construction activities occurring during each observation
period;
(iii) Record of implementation of shutdowns, including the distance
of animals to the pile and description of specific actions that ensued
and resulting behavior of the animal, if any;
(iv) An estimated total take extrapolated from the number of marine
mammals observed during the course of construction activities, if
necessary.
(v) Deviation from initial proposal in pile numbers, pile types,
average driving times, etc.;
(vi) Weather parameters (e.g., percent cover, visibility);
(vii) Water conditions (e.g., sea state, tide state);
(viii) Species, numbers, and, if possible, sex and age class of
marine mammals;
(ix) Description of any observable marine mammal behavior patterns,
(x) Distance from pile driving activities to marine mammals and
distance from the marine mammals to the observation point;
(x) Locations of all marine mammal observations; and
(xi) Other human activity in the area.
(b) Reporting injured or dead marine mammals:
(i) In the unanticipated event that the specified activity clearly
causes the take of a marine mammal in a manner prohibited by this IHA,
such as an injury (Level A harassment), serious injury, or mortality,
The Port of San Francisco must immediately cease the specified
activities and report the incident to the Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, and the West Coast Stranding Coordinator, NMFS. The
report must include the following information:
1. Time and date of the incident;
2. Description of the incident;
3. Environmental conditions (e.g., wind speed and direction,
Beaufort sea state, cloud cover, and visibility);
4. Description of all marine mammal observations and active sound
source use in the 24 hours preceding the incident;
5. Species identification or description of the animal(s) involved;
6. Fate of the animal(s); and
7. Photographs or video footage of the animal(s).
Activities must not resume until NMFS is able to review the
circumstances of the prohibited take. NMFS will work with the Port of
San Francisco to determine what measures are necessary to minimize the
likelihood of further prohibited take and ensure MMPA compliance. The
Port of San Francisco may not resume their activities until notified by
NMFS;
(i) In the event that the Port of San Francisco discovers an
injured or dead marine mammal, and the lead observer determines that
the cause of the injury or death is unknown and the death is relatively
recent (e.g., in less than a moderate state of decomposition), the Port
of San Francisco must immediately report the incident to the Office of
Protected Resources, NMFS, and the West Coast Stranding Coordinator,
NMFS;
(ii) The report must include the same information identified in
6(b)(i) of this IHA. Activities may continue while NMFS reviews the
circumstances of the incident. NMFS will work with the Port of San
Francisco to determine whether additional mitigation measures or
modifications to the activities are appropriate;
(iii) In the event that the Port of San Francisco discovers an
injured or dead marine mammal, and the lead observer determines that
the injury or death is not associated with or related to the activities
authorized in the IHA (e.g., previously wounded animal, carcass with
moderate to advanced decomposition, or scavenger damage), the Port of
San Francisco must report the incident to the Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, and the West Coast Stranding Coordinator, NMFS, within
24 hours of the discovery. The Port of San Francisco must provide
photographs or video footage or other documentation of the stranded
animal sighting to NMFS;
7. This Authorization may be modified, suspended or withdrawn if
the holder fails to abide by the conditions prescribed herein, or if
NMFS determines the authorized taking is having more than a negligible
impact on the species or stock of affected marine mammals.
Request for Public Comments
We request comment on our analyses, the proposed authorization, the
Port's potential sound source verification efforts, and any other
aspect of this Notice of Proposed IHA for the proposed action. We also
request comment on the potential for renewal of this proposed IHA as
described in the paragraph below. Please include with your comments any
supporting data or literature citations to help inform our final
decision on the request for MMPA authorization.
On a case-by-case basis, NMFS may issue a second one-year IHA
without additional notice when (1) another year of identical or nearly
identical activities as described in the Specified Activities section
is planned or (2) the activities would not be completed by the time the
IHA expires and a second IHA would allow for completion of the
activities beyond that described in the Dates and Duration section,
provided all of the following conditions are met:
A request for renewal is received no later than 60 days
prior to expiration of the current IHA;
The request for renewal must include the following:
(1) An explanation that the activities to be conducted beyond the
initial dates either are identical to the previously analyzed
activities or include changes so minor (e.g., reduction in pile size)
that the changes do not affect the previous analyses, take estimates,
or
[[Page 42490]]
mitigation and monitoring requirements; and
(2) A preliminary monitoring report showing the results of the
required monitoring to date and an explanation showing that the
monitoring results do not indicate impacts of a scale or nature not
previously analyzed or authorized;
Upon review of the request for renewal, the status of the
affected species or stocks, and any other pertinent information, NMFS
determines that there are no more than minor changes in the activities,
the mitigation and monitoring measures remain the same and appropriate,
and the original findings remain valid.
Dated: August 16, 2018.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
[FR Doc. 2018-18056 Filed 8-21-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P