Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Reclassification of the Endangered June Sucker to Threatened With a Section 4(d) Rule, 192-212 [2020-27833]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS–R6–ES–2019–0026;
FXES11130900000–201–FF09E22000]
RIN 1018–BD48
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; Reclassification of the
Endangered June Sucker to
Threatened With a Section 4(d) Rule
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), are
reclassifying the June sucker
(Chasmistes liorus) from endangered to
threatened under the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act),
due to substantial improvements in the
species’ overall status since its original
listing as endangered in 1986. This
action is based on a thorough review of
the best scientific and commercial data
available, which indicates that the June
sucker no longer meets the definition of
an endangered species under the Act.
The June sucker will remain protected
as a threatened species under the Act.
We are also finalizing a rule under
section 4(d) of the Act that provides for
the conservation of the June sucker.
DATES: This rule is effective February 3,
2021.
ADDRESSES: This final rule, supporting
documents we used in preparing this
rule, and public comments we received
are available on the internet at https://
www.regulations.gov at Docket No.
FWS–R6–ES–2019–0026. Persons who
use a telecommunications device for the
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Relay
Service at 800–877–8339.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Yvette Converse, Field Supervisor,
telephone: 801–975–3330. Direct all
questions or requests for additional
information to: JUNE SUCKER
QUESTIONS, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Utah Ecological Services Field
Office, 2369 Orton Circle, Suite 50, West
Valley City, UT 84119. Persons who use
a TDD may call the Federal Relay
Service at 800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Executive Summary
Why we need to publish a rule. Under
the Act, if a species is determined to no
longer be an endangered or threatened
species, we may reclassify the species or
remove it from the Federal Lists of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
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and Plants due to recovery. A species is
an ‘‘endangered species’’ for purposes of
the Act if it is in danger of extinction
throughout all or a significant portion of
its range and is a ‘‘threatened species’’
if it is likely to become an endangered
species within the foreseeable future
throughout all or a significant portion of
its range. The Act does not define the
term ‘‘foreseeable future.’’ However, we
consider ‘‘foreseeable future’’ as that
period of time within which a
reasonable prediction can be relied
upon in making a determination about
the future conservation status of a
species. We are reclassifying June
sucker from endangered to threatened
(i.e., ‘‘downlisting’’) because we have
determined that the species is no longer
in danger of extinction throughout all or
a significant portion of its range.
Downlisting a species can only be
completed by issuing a rule.
The basis for our action. Under the
Act, we can determine that a species is
an endangered or threatened species
based on any one or more of the
following five factors or the cumulative
effects thereof: (A) The present or
threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat or range; (B)
overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes; (C) disease or predation; (D)
the inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms; or (E) other natural or
manmade factors affecting its continued
existence. Based on an assessment of the
best available information regarding the
status of and threats to June sucker, we
have determined that the species no
longer meets the definition of
endangered under the Act, but does
meet the definition of threatened. The
4(d) rule provides exceptions to take
prohibitions for activities that will
further recovery of the species.
This final rule recognizes that based
on the best available science, June
sucker no longer meets the definition of
an endangered species, but will remain
protected as a threatened species under
the Act. This progress towards recovery
is a result of conservation efforts
implemented by stakeholders.
Collaborative conservation efforts have
reduced the intensity of threats to the
species and improved its population
numbers. The 4(d) rule will
accommodate recovery activities such as
non-native control efforts, habitat
restoration, monitoring, research,
stocking, and refuge maintenance.
Previous Federal Actions
On March 31, 1986, we published in
the Federal Register (51 FR 10851) the
final rule listing June sucker as an
endangered species and designating
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critical habitat comprising the lower 4.9
miles (mi) (7.8 kilometers (km)) of the
Provo River in Utah County, Utah.
On November 13, 2001, we published
in the Federal Register (66 FR 56840) a
notice formally declaring our intention
to participate in the multi-agency June
Sucker Recovery Implementation
Program (JSRIP) in partnership with the
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR),
Utah Reclamation Mitigation and
Conservation Commission (URMCC),
the Department of the Interior (DOI),
State of Utah Department of Natural
Resources (UDNR), the Central Utah
Water Conservancy District (CUWCD),
Provo River Water Users Association,
Provo Reservoir Water Users Company,
and outdoor interest groups. The JSRIP
was designed to implement recovery
actions for the June sucker and facilitate
resolution of conflicts associated with
June sucker recovery in the Utah Lake
and Provo River basins in Utah. We
have participated in the JSRIP since this
time and remain an active program
member.
On November 26, 2019, we published
in the Federal Register (84 FR 65080) a
proposed rule to reclassify June sucker
from ‘‘endangered’’ to ‘‘threatened’’ (i.e.,
to ‘‘downlist’’ the species) on the List of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
(List). Please refer to that proposed rule
for a detailed description of the Federal
actions concerning this species that
occurred prior to November 26, 2019.
Species Information
It is our intent to discuss only those
topics directly related to downlisting
June sucker in this rule. The citations
represent only the sources required to
support this action or to provide context
for it, and are not the sum total of all
literature pertaining to the species. For
more information on the description,
biology, ecology, and habitat of the
species, please refer to the final listing
rule published in the Federal Register
on March 31, 1986 (51 FR 10851), and
the species’ recovery plan (Service
1999), as well as the materials cited in
this rule. These documents will be
available as supporting materials on
https://www.regulations.gov under
Docket No. FWS–R6–ES–2019–0026.
In our analysis, we identify the
species’ ecological requirements for
survival and reproduction using the
concepts of resiliency, redundancy, and
representation (the 3Rs). Resiliency is
the ability of a species to withstand
environmental and demographic
stochastic events (the natural range of
favorable and unfavorable conditions). It
is associated with population size,
growth rate, and habitat quality.
Redundancy is the ability of a species to
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withstand catastrophic events for which
adaptation is unlikely. It is associated
with the number, distribution, and
resilience of individual populations
throughout the current range of the
species. Representation is the ability of
a species to adapt to novel changes in
its environment, as measured by its
ecological and genetic diversity and its
ability to disperse and colonize new
areas.
Taxonomy and Description
The June sucker, a unique lake sucker
named for the month in which it
spawns, was first collected and
described by David S. Jordan in 1878, in
Utah Lake, Utah County, Utah (Jordan
1878, entire). However, taxonomic
questions regarding hybridization of the
June sucker and co-occurring Utah
sucker (Catostomus ardens) ultimately
resulted in reclassification of the species
as described below.
The two species likely evolved
together in Utah Lake. During the 1930s,
a severe drought stressed the sucker
populations in Utah Lake, increasing the
incidence of June and Utah sucker
hybridization (Miller and Smith 1981, p.
7). After this hybridization event, as
sucker populations increased in
abundance, the new genes that occurred
in both the June sucker and Utah sucker
populations resulted in hybrid
characteristics within both populations
(Evans 1997, p. 8). It is likely that the
two species may have hybridized at
multiple points in the past, in response
to environmental bottlenecks (Evans
1997, pp. 9–12). As a result of the
hybridization event in the 1930s, two
subspecies of June sucker were
originally identified—Chasmistes liorus
liorus for sucker specimens collected in
Utah Lake in the late 1800s, and
Chasmistes liorus mictus for specimens
collected after 1939, following the
drought years (Miller and Smith 1981,
p. 11). This classification was never
corroborated, and because the June
sucker maintained its distinctiveness
from other lake suckers despite
hybridization, we determined that it
should be listed as a distinct species
under the name Chasmistes liorus (51
FR 10851; March 31, 1986).
The June sucker has a large, robust
body; a wide, rounded head; and a
hump on the snout (Scoppettone and
Vinyard 1991, p. 1). Adults are 17–24
inches (in) (43.2–61.0 centimeters (cm))
in length (Scoppettone and Vinyard
1991, p. 1; Belk 1998, p. 2). Lake suckers
are mid-water planktivores (plankton
feeders). The June sucker is a long-lived
species, living to 40 years or more
(Scoppettone and Vinyard 1991, p. 3;
Belk 1998, p. 6). In the wild, June
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suckers reach reproductive maturity at
5–10 years of age. They exhibit rapid
growth for the first 3–5 years, with
intermediate growth rates between ages
8–10, and a further reduced growth rate
after age 10. Growth between sexes does
not differ within the first 10 years
(Scoppettone and Vinyard 1991, p. 9).
Distribution and Habitat
The June sucker is native and
endemic to Utah Lake and its
tributaries, which are the primary
spawning habitat for the species. The
June sucker is not found outside of its
native range except in two populations
established for conservation purposes. A
refuge population was created as part of
the JSRIP stocking program to enhance
and secure the species’ population in
Utah Lake at the Fisheries Experiment
Station (FES) hatchery in Logan, Utah
(Service 2015, entire). An additional
population was established in Red Butte
Reservoir, Salt Lake County, Utah, in
2004 and is now self-sustaining (Utah
Division of Wildlife Resources (UDWR)
2010, pp. 4–5). These additional
populations have aided in retaining
ecologic and genetic diversity in June
sucker, which in turn aids the species
in adapting to changing environmental
conditions (i.e., increases
representation) (JSRIP 2018, pp. 2–3).
Utah Lake is a remnant of ancient
Lake Bonneville, and is one of the
largest natural freshwater lakes in the
western United States. It covers an area
of approximately 150 square miles (mi2)
(400 square kilometers (km2)) and is
relatively shallow, averaging 9 feet (ft)
(2.7 meters (m)) in depth (Brimhall and
Merritt 1981, pp. 2–3). The lake lies
west of Provo, Utah, and is the terminus
for several rivers and creeks, including
the Provo, Spanish Fork, and American
Fork Rivers, and Hobble and Battle
Creeks. The outflow of Utah Lake is the
Jordan River, which flows north into the
Great Salt Lake, a terminal basin.
Utah Lake is located in a sedimentary
drainage basin dominated by erosive
soils with high salt concentrations. Utah
Lake had a sediment filling rate of about
0.03 in (1 millimeter (mm)) per year
over the past 10,000 years; this rate
more than doubled with the
urbanization of Utah Valley (Brimhall
and Merritt 1981, pp. 3–5). Faults under
the lake appear to be lowering the lake
bed at about the same rate as sediment
is filling it (Brimhall and Merritt 1981,
pp. 10–11). Inputs of nutrient-rich
sediments combined with the lake’s
high evaporation rate cause high levels
of sediment loading, high soluble salt
concentrations, and high nutrient levels
as a baseline condition (Brimhall and
Merritt 1981, p. 11).
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Shallow lakes, such as Utah Lake, are
typically characterized as having one of
two ecological states: A clear water state
or a turbid water state (Scheffer 1998, p.
10). The clear water state is often
dominated by rooted aquatic
macrophytes (aquatic plants) that can
greatly reduce turbidity by securing
bottom sediments (Carpenter and Lodge
1986, p. 4; Madsen et al. 2001, p. 6) and
preventing excessive phytoplankton
(algae) production through a suite of
mechanisms (Timms and Moss 1984,
pp. 3–5). Alternatively, a shallow lake
in a turbid water state contains little or
no aquatic vegetation to secure bottom
sediments (Madsen et al. 2001, p. 9). As
a result, fish movement and wave action
can easily suspend lake-bottom
sediments (Madsen et al. 2001, p. 9). In
addition, fish can promote algal
production by recycling nutrients (both
through feeding activity and excretion).
Fish can also suppress zooplankton
densities through predation, and the
zooplankton would otherwise suppress
algal abundance (Timms and Moss
1984, p. 11; Brett and Goldman 1996, p.
3).
Historically, Utah Lake existed in a
clear water state dominated by rooted
aquatic vegetation, as shown in
sediment cores extracted from Utah
Lake (Macharia and Power 2011, p. 3).
Sediment cores reveal a shift in the state
of the lake shortly after European
settlement of Utah Valley to an algaedominated, turbid condition, lacking
macrophytic vegetation that serves as
refugial habitat for June sucker (Brimhill
and Merritt 1981, p. 16; Scheffer 1998,
p. 6; Hickman and Thurin 2007, p. 8;
Macharia and Power 2011, p. 5). This
shift is believed to be a result of
excessive nutrient input, managementinduced fluctuations in lake levels, and
the introduction of common carp
(Cyprinus carpio). The result of
compounded natural and human-caused
effects is a present-day lake ecosystem
that is dominated by algae, rather than
the clear water state in which June
sucker evolved.
The extent of ideal riverine habitat
available for spawning adults and
developing larval June sucker was more
abundant historically than it is
currently. Prior to settlement of Utah
Valley, spawning tributaries, such as the
Provo, Spanish Fork, and American
Fork Rivers, and Hobble Creek,
contained large deltas with braided,
slow, meandering channels and aquatic
vegetation that provided suitable
spawning and larval rearing habitat
(Olsen et al. 2002, p. 4). Multiple
spawning tributaries provided
redundancy for June sucker. The range
of diverse habitats historically present
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within these tributaries was essential to
larval sucker survival and maintaining
the species’ resiliency. Most
importantly, slow water pool and marsh
habitats provided refuge from predation
by larger fishes.
Since European colonization of Utah
Valley, changes to the tributaries have
decreased the available habitat for June
sucker spawning and rearing, although
recent restoration projects have
improved conditions in the Provo River
and Hobble Creek. The Provo River
contains many natural characteristics
that support the majority of the June
sucker spawning run and also play an
important role in contributing to the
recovery of the species. The Provo River
is the largest tributary to the lake in
terms of annual flow, width, and
watershed area (Stamp et al. 2002, p.
19). All of these characteristics
contribute to higher numbers of
spawning June suckers using the Provo
River than the other Utah Lake
tributaries. These characteristics also
best support the proper timing of the
June sucker’s spawning period and help
protect against further hybridization
with Utah sucker. Continued increase
and improvement of available larval
rearing habitat in the Provo River is
necessary for recovery of the species.
Biology and Ecology
June suckers are highly mobile and
can cover large portions of their range
in a short period of time (Radant and
Sakaguchi 1981, p. 7; Buelow 2006, p.
4; Landom et al. 2006, p. 13). Adult June
suckers exhibit lake-wide distributional
behavior throughout most of the year
(Buelow 2006). However, in the fall,
June suckers congregate along the
western lakeshore, and in the winter,
move to the eastern areas. One
explanation for the easterly orientation
in the winter may be the presence of
relatively warm fresh-water springs
along the eastern shore of Utah Lake
(SWCA 2002, p. 14).
During pre-spawn staging, in April
and May, June suckers congregate in
large numbers near the mouths of the
Provo River, Hobble Creek, Spanish
Fork River, and American Fork River
(Radant and Hickman 1984, p. 3;
Buelow et al. 2006, p. 4; Hines 2011, p.
8). June suckers generally initiate a
spawning migration into Utah Lake
tributaries (primarily the Provo River,
but also Hobble Creek and, to a lesser
extent, Spanish Fork River and
American Fork River) during the second
and third weeks of May (Radant and
Hickman 1984, p. 7). Provo Bay is likely
one of their primary pre-spawn and
post-spawn congregation areas (Buelow
2006, p. 4).
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Most spawning is completed within
5–8 days. Post-spawning suckers
congregate near the mouth of Provo Bay,
which could be a response to the high
food productivity that remains in the
bay until the fall (Radant and Shirley
1987, p. 13; Buelow 2006, p. 8).
Zooplankton densities are greater in
Provo Bay than in other lake areas
(Kreitzer et al. 2011, p. 9), providing
abundant food to meet the energy
demands of post-spawn suckers, as well
as an ideal location for the growth and
survival of young-of-year June suckers
recently emerged from the spawning
tributaries (Kreitzer et al. 2011, p. 10).
June sucker spawning habitat consists
of moderately deep runs and riffles in
slow to moderate current with a
substrate composed of 4–8 in (100–200
mm) coarse gravel or small cobble that
is free of silt and algae. Deeper pools
adjacent to spawning areas may provide
important resting or staging areas
(Stamp et al. 2002, p. 5).
Under natural conditions, June sucker
larvae drift downstream and rear in
shallow vegetated habitats near tributary
mouths in Utah Lake (Modde and
Muirhead 1990, pp. 7–8; Crowl and
Thomas 1997, p. 11; Keleher et al. 1998,
p. 47). Juvenile June suckers then
migrate into Utah Lake and use littoral
aquatic vegetation as cover and refuge
(Crowl and Thomas 1997, p. 11). June
sucker juveniles form schools near the
water surface, presumably feeding on
zooplankton in the shallows. Young-ofyear suckers form shoals (aggregations
of hundreds of fish) near the surface
under the cover of aquatic vegetation
(Billman 2008, p. 3).
However, effects from nonnative
common carp, altered tributary flows,
lake water level management, nutrient
loading, poor water quality, and river
channelization have reduced the
amount of shallow, warm, and complex
vegetated aquatic habitat for rearing at
the tributary mouths and Utah Lake
interface. This reduction in rearing
habitat has reduced survival of June
suckers during the early life stages
(Modde and Muirhead 1990, p. 9; Olsen
et al. 2002, p. 6), resulting in reduced
population viability and resiliency. As
June suckers reach the subadult stage,
they begin to move offshore (Billman
2005, p. 16).
Species Abundance and Trends
Early accounts indicate that Utah
Lake supported an enormous population
of June suckers (Heckmann et al. 1981,
p. 8), and was proclaimed ‘‘the greatest
sucker pond in the universe’’ (Jordan
1878, p. 2). The first major reductions in
the number of June suckers were in the
late 1800s. Through the mid-1900s, June
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suckers were caught during their
spawning runs and widely used as
fertilizer and food (Carter 1969, p. 7).
During this period, an estimated 1,653
tons (1,500 metric tons) of spawning
suckers were killed when 2.1 mi (3.3
km) of the Provo River was dewatered
due to reduced water availability and
high demand (Carter 1969, p. 8).
Hundreds of tons of suckers also died
when Utah Lake was nearly emptied
during a 1932–1935 drought (Tanner
1936, p. 3). After the drought, June
sucker populations gradually increased
again, but due to the combined impacts
of ongoing drought, overexploitation,
and habitat destruction, the population
did not return to its historical level
(Heckmann et al. 1981, p. 9). June
suckers were rare in monitoring surveys
during the 1950s through the 1970s
(Heckmann et al. 1981, p. 11; Radant
and Sakaguchi 1981, p. 5).
By the time the species was listed
under the Act (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.)
in 1986, the June sucker had an
estimated wild spawning population of
fewer than 1,000 individuals. In 1999,
we estimated the wild spawning
population to be approximately 300
individuals, with no evidence of wild
recruitment (Keleher et al. 1998, pp. 12,
53; Service 1999, p. 5).
Due to the immediate threat of June
sucker extinction at the time of listing,
the UDWR began raising populations in
hatcheries and at secure refuge sites.
These efforts resulted in the stocking of
June suckers into Utah Lake to boost
population numbers beginning in the
1990s and continuing through the
present day (UDWR 2018b, p. 3). As of
2017, more than 800,000 captive-bred
June suckers have been stocked in Utah
Lake (UDWR 2017b, p. 6). Stocking is
planned to continue until the wild
population is self-sustaining, which will
be determined by population viability
analysis (JSRIP 2018, p. 10).
Approximately 3,500 June suckers
were spawning annually in Utah Lake
tributaries as of 2016 (Conner and
Landom 2018, p. 2). This represents at
least a ten-fold increase in spawning
fish from when the recovery plan was
finalized in 1999 (Conner and Landom
2018, p. 2). The vast majority of fish
detected spawning in Utah Lake
tributaries are stocked fish that have
become naturalized (survived for
multiple years until reaching breeding
age) (UDWR 2018c, p. 7). For all
spawning tributaries combined, the
spawning population size for both sexes
substantially increased from 2008 to
2016, and the total known spawning
population size grew by 22 percent.
These figures represent a minimum
number of confirmed spawning June
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suckers, not a population estimate. They
do not include subadult or juvenile
individuals, non-spawning adults,
untagged fish, or tagged fish that were
not detected via the monitoring
antennae.
The actual population of wild June
suckers in Utah Lake is likely greater
than 3,500, because this number
represents only the spawning adults.
However, we did not attempt to
extrapolate a total population estimate
from the adult spawning data because
monitoring efforts in tributaries were
not consistent across all years, data were
not available for one year due to high
flows, and the percentage and origin of
untagged fish in Utah Lake is not yet
clear (Conner and Landom 2018, p. 4).
Stocked June suckers are tagged with a
passive integrated transponder (PIT).
Untagged fish may be stocked fish that
lost their PIT tag or the result of
reproduction (i.e., recruitment) in the
wild (UDWR 2017, entire).
Monitoring of June suckers in the
lower Provo River during the 2018
spawning period captured a significant
portion of fish that were not PIT tagged
(UDWR 2018, p. 3). The natural
geochemical markers (signatures) in the
otoliths (ear bones) and fin rays of
collected, unmarked June suckers show
that 39 percent (12 of 31) of these fish
likely originated from the FES hatchery;
42 percent from Red Butte reservoir,
other rearing facilities, or inconclusive;
and 19 percent (6 of 31) had signatures
indicating they originated in Utah Lake
(Wolff and Johnson 2013, p. 9), meaning
they were likely recruited naturally into
Utah Lake. These results indicate that
successful natural reproduction and
recruitment are occurring, although the
exact location and conditions that
contributed to this successful natural
recruitment are not known. Additional
analysis of June suckers of unknown
origin is planned within the next several
years to determine the level of natural
recruitment occurring in Utah Lake.
Regardless of origin, capture of untagged
fish indicates there is an unknown
number of spawning June suckers that
were not accounted for in the spawning
population estimate.
The year-to-year survival rate of fish
stocked into Utah Lake varies
significantly depending on a number of
factors, including length of fish at stock
(which correlates to age) and time of
year stocked (Goldsmith et al. 2016, p.
5). June suckers stocked in early
summer that were 11.6 in (296 mm) in
length or more (usually representing an
individual that was 2 years old) had a
survival rate of 83 percent. June suckers
stocked at age 1 had survival rates
ranging from 0 to 67 percent. The
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smallest June suckers, those stocked at
under 7.9 in (200 mm), had a survival
rate into the next year of only 2 percent
(Goldsmith et al. 2016, p. 14).
Year-to-year survival rates for
spawning June suckers ranged from 65
to 95 percent depending on the tributary
and the year (Goldsmith et al. 2016, p.
3). Additionally, June suckers that were
stocked more than 10 years prior were
detected spawning on multiple
occasions, indicating the capability for
long-term survival in Utah Lake (Conner
and Landom 2018, p. 3). Between 2013
and 2016, June sucker showed a positive
population trend with a combined
annual growth rate of 1.06 for females
and 1.04 for males across three
tributaries (Provo River, Spanish Fork,
and Hobble Creek), with Provo River
having the highest population growth
rate and Hobble Creek showing an
overall decline (Conner and Landom
2018, p. 3). However, nearly 50 percent
of spawning June sucker detected in
Hobble Creek were of unknown origin.
Therefore, a decline in detected
spawners in this tributary does not
necessarily mean fewer fish overall are
using the tributary. Naturally recruited
fish that have never been tagged would
not be detected by the remote electronic
methods used to collect June sucker
presence information at spawning
locations.
In summary, the viability of June
sucker in its native range––as indicated
by its representation, resiliency, and
redundancy—has improved
significantly since the time of listing,
largely due to the efforts of the JSRIP
(see Recovery, below). Stocking of June
suckers, a program designed to
maximize representation through
genetic diversity, has been very
successful at increasing the number of
fish in Utah Lake. Stocked individuals
are behaving as wild fish by migrating
to new habitats, surviving many years,
and participating in spawning activities.
The JSRIP stocking program is planning
to continue until the June sucker
reaches self-sustaining population
levels, with a focus on stocking 2-yearold fish over 12 in (300 mm) long to
increase their chances of survival. The
spawning population has increased at
least ten-fold since 1999; there is
evidence of high year-to-year survival
rates and long-term survival for
spawning individuals; and the
spawning population is increasing at a
high rate, improving the resiliency of
the wild population. The stocking
program and maintenance of two
additional populations (the refuge
population at FES hatchery and the
introduced population at Red Butte
Reservoir) also provide redundancy to
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the wild population. In 2020–2021, a
study is underway to improve our
understanding of the degree of natural
recruitment of June sucker in Utah Lake
and the origin of untagged June suckers.
This information will, combined with
future monitoring, yield a population
estimate and help inform future
stocking rates and management
decisions for the purposes of further
bolstering the species’ representation,
resiliency, and redundancy to achieve
full recovery.
Recovery
Section 4(f) of the Act directs us to
develop and implement recovery plans
for the conservation and survival of
endangered and threatened species
unless we determine that such a plan
will not promote the conservation of the
species. Under section 4(f)(1)(B)(ii),
recovery plans must, to the maximum
extent practicable, include objective,
measurable criteria which, when met,
would result in a determination, in
accordance with the provisions of
section 4 of the Act, that the species be
removed from the List.
Recovery plans provide a roadmap for
us and our partners on methods of
enhancing conservation and minimizing
threats to listed species, as well as
measurable criteria against which to
evaluate progress towards recovery and
assess the species’ likely future
condition. However, they are not
regulatory documents and do not
substitute for the determinations and
promulgation of regulations required
under section 4(a)(1) of the Act. A
decision to revise the status of a species,
or to delist a species, is ultimately based
on an analysis of the best scientific and
commercial data available to determine
whether a species is no longer an
endangered species or a threatened
species, regardless of whether that
information differs from the recovery
plan.
There are many paths to
accomplishing recovery of a species,
and recovery may be achieved without
all of the criteria in a recovery plan
being fully met. For example, one or
more criteria may be exceeded while
other criteria may not yet be
accomplished. In that instance, we may
determine that the threats are
minimized sufficiently and that the
species is robust enough that it no
longer meets the definition of an
endangered species or a threatened
species. In other cases, we may discover
new recovery opportunities after having
finalized the recovery plan. Parties
seeking to conserve the species may use
these opportunities instead of methods
identified in the recovery plan.
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Likewise, we may learn new
information about the species after we
finalize the recovery plan. The new
information may change the extent to
which existing criteria are appropriate
for identifying recovery of the species.
The recovery of a species is a dynamic
process requiring adaptive management
that may, or may not, follow all of the
guidance provided in a recovery plan.
We finalized a recovery plan for June
sucker in 1999, which included
recovery actions and recovery criteria
for downlisting and delisting of June
sucker. These criteria lack specific
metrics and will be updated in a
forthcoming revised recovery plan for
the species. However, they are still
relevant to the evaluation of recovery,
and we discuss them in this document
as one way to evaluate the change in
status of June sucker.
Since 2002, the JSRIP has funded,
implemented, and overseen recovery
actions for the conservation of June
sucker in accordance with the guidance
provided by the recovery plan,
including using adaptive management
techniques to address new stressors as
they arose. These recovery actions
include: (1) Acquiring and managing
water flows, (2) restoring habitat, (3)
removing carp, and (4) augmenting the
wild June sucker population. These
efforts, and how they relate to the
recovery criteria, are described in the
following paragraphs.
Acquisition and Management of Water
Flows
The first downlisting criterion
requires that Provo River flows essential
for June sucker spawning and
recruitment are protected (Service 2011,
p. 5). We consider this criterion to have
been met. The JSRIP provides annual
recommendations for river flows to
support June suckers on the Provo River
and Hobble Creek based on the known
biology of the species and the historical
flow levels to the CUWCD and other
water-managing bodies. The JSRIP has
also acquired water totaling over 21,000
acre-ft (25,903,080 cubic m (m3)) per
year to enhance flows during the
spawning season on the Provo River and
to supplement base flows through the
summer for the benefit of larval June
sucker. Approximately 13,000 acre-ft
(16,035,240 m3) of this water is
permanently allocated, and the
remainder is allocated through 2021.
The JSRIP is pursuing additional water,
permanent and temporary, to bolster
June sucker allocations after 2021 (JSRIP
2018, p. 5). Additionally, the JSRIP has
acquired 8,500 acre-ft (10,485,000 m3) of
permanent water for Hobble Creek, up
to 4,500 acre-ft (5,550,660 m3) of which
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may be used to supplement Provo river
flows as needed in any given year
(USBR 2017, pp. 3–5). These protected
water sources, when delivered as
additional water, provide added
resiliency by improving habitat quality
for the species, and operational
flexibility to address fluctuating annual
precipitation scenarios in a timely
manner.
The amount of water delivered to
supplement flows in the Provo River
and Hobble Creek and the timing of
those deliveries are determined
annually through a cooperative process
involving multiple agencies. In 1996,
the June Sucker Flow Work Group
(Flow Work Group) was formed by the
USBR, DOI Central Utah Project
Completion Act (CUPCA) Office, Provo
River Water Users Association, Provo
River Water Commissioner, CUWCD,
UDWR, the Service, Provo City Public
Works, and the URMCC. These agencies
initially worked together to adjust
reservoir releases to mimic a Provo
River spring runoff hydrograph and
improve June sucker spawning success.
Since 2002, this process has been
overseen by the JSRIP.
As recovery-specific water was
acquired, the role of the Flow Work
Group expanded to provide a forum for
determining the optimal delivery
pattern of supplemental flows. Based on
existing conditions for a given year (e.g.,
snow pack and reservoir storage), the
multi-disciplinary work group uses
operational flexibility for reservoir
water delivery and runoff timing to
evaluate and operate the system to
deliver year-round flows to benefit June
sucker recovery. Based on
recommendations of the Flow Work
Group, the JSRIP makes annual
recommendations for flow deliveries to
the Provo River and Hobble Creek,
adjusted for the available water
conditions. Water managers (including
USBR, CUPCA, Provo River Water Users
Association, the Provo River Water
Commissioner, CUWCD, and Provo City
Public Works) then work to deliver
water to meet that specific annual
recommendation and have been
successful in meeting the hydrograph
scenarios agreed to by the Flow Work
Group on an annual basis since 2004.
In 2004, the CUWCD, in cooperation
with the Service and other members of
the Flow Work Group, agreed on
operational scenarios that mimic dry,
moderate, and wet year flow patterns for
the Provo River (CUWCD et al. 2004, p.
17). The Flow Work Group applied
these operational scenarios in
determining the spawning season flow
pattern for the Provo River with the goal
of benefiting June sucker recovery. In
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2008, an ecosystem-based flow regime
recommendation was finalized for the
lower Provo River (Stamp et al. 2008, p.
13). This year-round flow
recommendation refined the operational
scenarios identified in 2004, through the
incorporation of relevant ecological
functions into the in-stream flow
analysis. Hydrologic variability,
geomorphology, water quality, aquatic
biology, and riparian biology were
considered as aspects of flow
recommendations. The year-round flow
recommendations are adaptive, with
consideration of the variability within
and among each water year. These
include recommendations for a baseline
flow, a spring runoff flow, and the
duration of the rising and receding flow
periods before and after runoff. As more
is learned about the associations
between flow and river functions, the
recommendations can be adjusted
(Stamp et al. 2008, p. 10). In 2015, the
JSRIP passed a resolution affirming this
process, which further defined how
flows in the Provo River should be
prioritized for the benefit of the June
sucker, and defined the roles of partners
in supporting the water needs of June
sucker in the Provo River (JSRIP 2015,
entire).
In 2009, ecosystem-based flow
recommendations were developed for
Hobble Creek in the Lower Hobble
Creek Ecosystem Flow
Recommendations Report (Stamp et al.
2009, pp. 11–12). These
recommendations were adopted by the
JSRIP, included in the East Hobble
Creek Restoration Project Environmental
Analysis (JSRIP 2009, p. 5), and are
currently considered each April when
determining the annual
recommendations for delivery of flows
to Hobble Creek (DOI et al. 2013, p. 41).
Similar to the Provo River, these
recommendations are intended to be
adaptive. In 2012, the JSRIP passed a
resolution affirming this process, which
further defines how flows in Hobble
Creek should be prioritized for the
benefit of June sucker, and defines the
roles of partners in supporting the water
needs of June sucker in Hobble Creek
(JSRIP 2012, entire).
Habitat Restoration
The second downlisting criterion for
June sucker requires that spawning and
brood-rearing habitat in the Provo River
and Utah Lake be enhanced or
established to provide for the continued
existence of all life stages (Service 1999,
p. 4). We consider this criterion to have
been met. Habitat restoration projects
occurred on the Provo River and Hobble
Creek, and habitat quality was enhanced
in Utah Lake as a result of nonnative
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species removal (see Carp Removal,
below).
Modifications of the Fort Field
diversion structure on the Provo River,
located within critical habitat, were
completed in October 2009. This
modification made an additional 1.2 mi
(1.9 km) of spawning habitat available
for the June sucker, permitting fish
passage farther upstream in the
historical range (URMCC 2009, pp. 8–9;
JSRIP 2008, p. 12). During the 2010
spawning season, June suckers were
observed in the Provo River upstream of
the modified Fort Field Diversion
structure (UDWR 2011, pp. 7–8). In
cooperation with the JSRIP, the CUWCD
and URMCC are working with other
diverters on the Provo River to evaluate
further diversion structure removal or
modification.
The JSRIP is also implementing a
large-scale stream channel and delta
restoration project for the lower Provo
River and its interface with Utah Lake,
called the Provo River Delta Restoration
Project (PRDRP). This project will
restore, enhance, and create habitat
conditions in the lower Provo River for
spawning, hatching, larval transport,
rearing, and recruitment of the June
sucker to the adult life stage, thus
increasing the species’ resiliency (Olson
et al. 2002, p. 15; BIO–WEST 2010, p.
3). The PRDRP will reestablish some of
the historical delta conditions in the
Provo River, thereby increasing habitat
complexity and providing appropriate
physical and biological conditions
necessary for egg hatching, larval
development, growth, young-of-year
survival, and recruitment of young fish
into the adult population. A final
environmental impact statement (EIS)
for the PRDRP was released in April
2015, with a record of decision signed
in May 2015. Federal agencies have
acquired lands needed for the PRDRP
and developed a detailed design to
provide optimal rearing habitat for June
sucker (PRDRP 2017, entire). Work
began spring of 2020, and is expected to
be completed in 2024 (Stamp 2020,
pers. comm.).
Shortly after formation of the JSRIP,
and based on delisting criteria identified
in the 1999 June Sucker Recovery Plan
(Service 1999, pp. 5–6), several Utah
Lake tributaries were evaluated for the
purpose of establishing a second
spawning run of June sucker in addition
to the Provo River spawning run (Stamp
et al. 2002, p. 13). Depending on the
availability of water in any given year,
June suckers will use multiple other
tributaries for spawning, including
Spanish Fork, American Fork, and
Current Creek. However, not all
tributaries are available in every year,
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due to changing lake levels and water
availability. Therefore, we determined
that an additional, reliably available
(i.e., available every year) spawning run
would improve redundancy for the
species by providing security in the
event that a catastrophic event
eliminated the Provo River spawning
habitat. Hobble Creek provides the best
opportunity of the available spawning
tributaries for establishing a second
consistent spawning run (Stamp et al.
2002, p. 13). Hobble Creek is more
frequently available to fish in low water
years compared to other tributaries.
However, Hobble Creek would still
require habitat enhancements to make it
suitable for consistent, annual June
sucker spawning runs and allow for the
development of quality rearing habitat
for young suckers (Stamp et al. 2002, p.
13).
In 2008, the lower 0.5 mi (0.8 km) of
Hobble Creek was relocated and
reconstructed on land purchased by the
JSRIP to provide June sucker spawning
habitat, a more naturally functioning
stream channel, and suitable nursery
habitat for young suckers. The JSRIP
partnered with the Utah Transit
Authority to implement the habitat
restoration project on the purchased
property (DOI 2008, p. 14). The project
re-created a functioning delta at the
interface between Hobble Creek and
Utah Lake, and allowed the
reestablishment of a June sucker
spawning run. The restoration resulted
in more active river processes and
includes numerous seasonally
inundated off-channel ponds, which
serve as larval nursery and rearing
habitat to increase larval fish growth
and survival (DOI 2008, p. 22).
In 2009, June suckers spawned in the
restored Hobble Creek, with verified
larval production (Landom and Crowl
2010, pp. 1–12), and in 2010, juvenile
June suckers (from 2009 spawning) were
found in ponds within the Hobble Creek
restoration area (Landress 2011, p. 4).
Due to the success of the restoration,
additional reaches of Hobble Creek have
been selected for habitat enhancements
to increase the amount of available
spawning habitat. For example,
approximately 1 mi (1.6 km) upstream
of the lower Hobble Creek restoration
area, the East Hobble Creek Restoration
Project was completed to enhance the
stream channel by increasing floodplain
width, sinuosity, and floodplain
connectivity; modify or remove
diversion structures; and provide
additional stream flows for Hobble
Creek (JSRIP 2016b, p. 17). An age-1
June sucker was observed in this area in
January 2018, indicating that June
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197
suckers are using this area for rearing
(Fonken 2018, pers. comm.).
Improving water quality in Utah Lake
is also an important part of enhancing
June sucker habitat. In the interest of
supporting June sucker recovery
through increased water quality, the
Utah Division of Water Quality (UDWQ)
became a member of the JSRIP in 2017
(JSRIP 2017). As part of the State’s
commitment to water quality
management and improvement in Utah
Lake, UDWQ formed a science panel
composed of independent experts and
representatives of all stakeholder
agencies for the express purpose of
furthering scientific understanding of
the conditions in Utah Lake and
creating a comprehensive plan for
improvement. This plan will support
June sucker recovery by including
recommendations for actions and
threshold limits of nutrients and other
anthropogenic inputs for the benefit of
June sucker specifically and the Utah
Lake ecosystem as a whole (UDWQ
2017, entire).
Carp Removal
The third downlisting criterion
requires that nonnative species that
present a threat to the continued
existence of June sucker are reduced or
eliminated from Utah Lake. We consider
this criterion met, but ongoing. The
common carp was identified as the
nonnative species having the greatest
adverse impact on June sucker habitat
and resiliency, due to the large-scale
changes in water quality and
macrophytic vegetation caused by these
fish (see Distribution and Habitat,
above).
In 2009, a mechanical removal
program was instituted to remove
common carp from Utah Lake. Between
2009 and 2017, over 13,000 tons (11,750
metric tons) of common carp were
removed from the lake (UDWR 2017c, p.
2). This removal resulted in a decline of
the common carp population. Catch-perunit effort of common carp has
decreased over the past 4 years, while
average weight of individual common
carp has increased, thus indicating a
trend of reduction in common carp
density in Utah Lake (Gaeta and
Landom 2017, p. 7).
In 2015, after 6 years of common carp
removal, native macrophytes were
observed in Utah Lake vegetation
monitoring studies for the first time
(Landom 2016, pers. comm.). As of
2017, multiple sites in the lake have
native littoral vegetation, including sites
with increasing complexity supporting
more than four native macrophytic
species at one site (Dillingham 2018,
entire). Sites with more complex
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vegetation support a higher diversity of
macroinvertebrates, which provide
additional food for June sucker, provide
greater opportunities for June sucker to
shelter from predators, and indicate
improved water quality in the lake
(Dillingham 2018, entire).
The common carp removal program in
Utah Lake has a positive impact on
habitat quality, which may be
contributing to natural recruitment and
survival rates for the June sucker (Gaeta
and Landom 2017, p. 8; see Species
Abundance and Trends, above).
Ongoing research by Utah State
University continues to assess the
relationship between common carp
removal, habitat improvement, and June
sucker population response as well as
develop long-term recommendations for
sustainable common carp management
(Gaeta et al. 2018, entire). The JSRIP
prioritizes continued suppression of the
common carp population via
mechanical removal, as well as research
into genetically modified sterile (YY)
male technology that has the potential
to reduce or eliminate carp from Utah
Lake in the future (JSRIP 2018, p. 2).
Population Augmentation
The fourth and final downlisting
criterion in the June sucker recovery
plan is that an increasing, selfsustaining spawning run of wild June
sucker resulting in significant
recruitment over 10 years has been
reestablished in the Provo River. We
consider this criterion to be ongoing.
This criterion does not define
‘‘significant’’ recruitment. Although the
spawning population of June sucker is
increasing, annual stocking continues in
order to maintain the population. An
augmentation plan for the June sucker
set a goal, for the purposes of meeting
the recovery criterion of a selfsustaining population, of stocking 2.8
million individuals into Utah Lake
(Service and URMCC 1998, entire). The
goal was based on early studies of June
sucker survival and the production
capabilities of the facilities. As of 2017,
more than 800,000 captive-bred June
sucker have been stocked in Utah Lake
from the various rearing locations, and
a long-term, continued stocking strategy
based on the most up-to-date research
on stocking success and survival rates is
under development (JSRIP 2008, p. 8;
UDWR 2017b, p. 6).
Although the June sucker has not yet
met this downlisting criterion identified
in the 1999 recovery plan, we find that
the population increases and trends
achieved thus far (see Species
Abundance and Trends, above), along
with the addition of refuge populations
to increase redundancy and genetic
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representation, support downlisting the
species. The criterion of an increasing,
self-sustaining spawning run of wild
June sucker resulting in significant
recruitment over 10 years is more
suitable as a delisting criterion and
indicative of full recovery.
Overall, recovery actions have
addressed many of the threats and
stressors affecting the June sucker. The
JSRIP has been effective in collaborating
to implement a stocking program,
increase June sucker spawning
locations, acquire and manage water
flows, remove nonnative common carp,
and develop and conduct habitat
restorations that target all life stages of
June sucker. Studies are planned to
improve understanding of the effects of
other threats and stressors, including
lake water quality and the impact of
other invasive species on the June
sucker. The JSRIP continues to be active
and committed to full recovery of the
June sucker.
Summary of Factors Affecting the
Species
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533)
and its implementing regulations (50
CFR part 424) set forth the procedures
for listing species, reclassifying species,
or removing species from listed status.
‘‘Species’’ is defined by the Act as
including any species or subspecies of
fish or wildlife or plants, and any
distinct vertebrate population segment
of fish or wildlife that interbreeds when
mature (16 U.S.C. 1532(16)). The Act
defines an endangered species as a
species that is ‘‘in danger of extinction
throughout all or a significant portion of
its range,’’ and a threatened species as
a species that is ‘‘likely to become an
endangered species within the
foreseeable future throughout all or a
significant portion of its range.’’
The Act requires that we determine
whether any species is an ‘‘endangered
species’’ or a ‘‘threatened species’’
because of any of the following factors:
(A) The present or threatened
destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat or range;
(B) Overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes;
(C) Disease or predation;
(D) The inadequacy of existing
regulatory mechanisms; or
(E) Other natural or manmade factors
affecting its continued existence.
These factors represent broad
categories of natural or human-caused
actions or conditions that could have an
effect on a species’ continued existence.
In evaluating these actions and
conditions, we look for those that may
have a negative effect on individuals of
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the species, as well as other actions or
conditions that may ameliorate any
negative effects or may have positive
effects.
We must consider these same five
factors in downlisting a species from
endangered to threatened. Under our
regulations at 50 CFR 424.11(c)-(e), we
may downlist a species if, after a review
of the species’ status, the best available
scientific and commercial data indicate
that the species no longer meets the
definition of an endangered species, but
that it meets the definition of a
threatened species.
For the purposes of this analysis, we
evaluate whether or not the June sucker
meets the Act’s definition of an
‘‘endangered species’’ or a ‘‘threatened
species,’’ based on the best scientific
and commercial information available.
We use the term ‘‘threat’’ to refer in
general to actions or conditions that are
known to or are reasonably likely to
negatively affect individuals of a
species. The term ‘‘threat’’ includes
actions or conditions that directly affect
individuals (direct impacts), as well as
those that affect individuals through
alteration of their habitat or required
resources (stressors). The term ‘‘threat’’
may encompass—either together or
separately—the source of the action or
condition or the action or condition
itself.
However, the mere identification of
any threat(s) does not necessarily mean
that the species meets the statutory
definition of an ‘‘endangered species’’ or
a ‘‘threatened species.’’ In determining
whether a species meets either
definition, we must evaluate all
identified threats by considering the
species’ expected response and the
effects of the threats—with regard to
those actions and conditions that will
ameliorate the threats—on an
individual, population, and species
level. We evaluate each threat and its
expected effects on the species and then
analyze the cumulative effect of all of
the threats on the species as a whole.
We also consider the cumulative effect
of the threats with regard to those
actions and conditions that will have
positive effects on the species—such as
any existing regulatory mechanisms or
conservation efforts. The Secretary
determines whether the species meets
the Act’s definition of an ‘‘endangered
species’’ or a ‘‘threatened species’’ only
after conducting this cumulative
analysis and describing the expected
effect on the species now and in the
foreseeable future.
The Act does not define the term
‘‘foreseeable future,’’ which appears in
the statutory definition of ‘‘threatened
species.’’ Our implementing regulations
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at 50 CFR 424.11(d) set forth a
framework for evaluating the foreseeable
future on a case-by-case basis. The term
foreseeable future extends only so far
into the future as we can reasonably
determine that both the future threats
and the species’ responses to those
threats are likely. In other words, the
foreseeable future is the period of time
in which we can make reliable
predictions. ‘‘Reliable’’ does not mean
‘‘certain’’; it means sufficient to provide
a reasonable degree of confidence in the
prediction. Thus, a prediction is reliable
if it is reasonable to depend on it when
making decisions.
It is not always possible or necessary
to define foreseeable future as a
particular number of years. Analysis of
the foreseeable future uses the best
scientific and commercial data available
and should consider the timeframes
applicable to the relevant threats and to
the species’ likely responses to those
threats in view of its life-history
characteristics. Data that are typically
relevant to assessing the species’
biological response include speciesspecific factors such as lifespan,
reproductive rates or productivity,
certain behaviors, and other
demographic factors.
In our determination, we correlate the
threats acting on the species to the
factors in section 4(a)(1) of the Act.
The following analysis examines
factors currently affecting the June
sucker or that are likely to affect it
within the foreseeable future. For each
factor, we examine the threats at the
time of listing in 1986 (or if not present
at the time of listing, the status of the
threat when first detected), the
downlisting criterion pertinent to the
threat, what conservation actions have
been taken to meet the downlisting
criteria or otherwise mitigate the threat,
the current status of the threat, and its
likely future impact on June sucker. We
also consider stressors not originally
considered at the time of listing, most
notably climate change.
Habitat Destruction and Modification
Loss and alteration of spawning and
rearing habitat were major factors
leading to the listing of the June sucker
(51 FR 10851; March 31, 1986) and
continue to pose a threat to the species’
overall resiliency and its recovery.
Suitable spawning and rearing habitat in
Utah Lake and its tributaries declined
due to water development, habitat
modification, introduction of common
carp, and urbanization, but has
improved since listing due to recovery
actions taken by the JSRIP.
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Water Development and Habitat
Modification
Water development and substantial
habitat modifications have occurred in
the Utah Lake drainage since the mid1800s. These changes include the
reduction in riverine flows (including
the Provo River) from numerous water
diversions, various water storage
projects, channelization, and additional
lake and in-stream alterations (Radant et
al. 1987, p. 13; UDWR and UDNR 1997,
p. 11; Andersen et al. 2007, p. 8). Many
of these modifications and water
depletions remain today, and continue
to hinder the quantity and quality of
June sucker rearing and spawning
habitat, which in turn impacts species
resiliency.
In 1849, settlers founded Fort Utah
along the Provo River and began
modifying the waters of Utah Lake and
its main tributaries (USBR 1989, p. 3).
In 1872, a low dam was placed across
the lake outflow to the Jordan River,
changing the function of Utah Lake into
a storage reservoir (CUWCD 2004, p. 2).
By the early 1900s, a pumping plant was
constructed at the outflow to allow the
lake to be lowered below the outlet
elevation; this structure has since been
modified and enlarged (Andersen et al.
2007, p. 5). The present capacity of the
pumping plant is 1,050 cubic feet per
second (cfs) (29.7 cubic meters per
second (cms)), and it can lower the lake
level 8–10 ft (2.4–3.0 m) below the
compromise elevation of 4,489 ft (1,368
m) (Andersen et al. 2007, p. 5). The
compromise elevation is a managed lake
elevation target that the responsible
water authorities have agreed not to
exceed through the active storage of
water. This compromise elevation was
intended to balance the threat of
flooding among lands adjacent to Utah
Lake and those downstream along the
Jordan River (CUWCD 2004, p. 7).
As a storage reservoir, the surface
elevation of Utah Lake fluctuates
widely. Prior to the influence of water
development projects, annual
fluctuations averaged 2.1 ft (0.6 m) per
year. For approximately 50 years, under
the influence of water development
projects, water levels fluctuated an
average of 3.5 ft (1.0 m) annually prior
to the completion of the Central Utah
Project. The Central Utah Project was
the largest water resources development
program in Utah, distributing portions
of Utah’s share of Colorado River water.
After its completion, annual lake
fluctuations averaged 2.5 ft (0.8 m)
(Hickman and Thurin 2007, p. 20).
Fluctuation in surface elevation of Utah
Lake (particularly while the Central
Utah Project was under construction) is
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one of the possible factors that
contributed to the marked degradation
of shoreline habitat and aquatic
vegetation in the lake and to a decline
in June sucker refugial habitat from
predators (Hickman and Thurin 2007, p.
23).
The long history of water management
in the Provo River, including river
alterations, dredging, and
channelization efforts, has modified the
historical braided and complex delta
into a single trapezoidal channel
(Radant et al. 1987, p. 15; Olsen et al.
2002, p. 11). The current channel lacks
vegetative cover, habitat complexity,
and the food sources necessary to
sustain larval fishes rearing in the lower
Provo River (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 20).
Additionally, the lower 2 mi (3.2 km) of
the Provo River experience a backwater
effect, where the velocity stalls under
low-flow scenarios and a high seasonal
lake level causes the water to back up
from the lake into the Provo River
(Stamp et al. 2008, p. 20). The slack
water substantially reduces the number
of larvae drifting into the lake. As a
result of their poorly developed
swimming abilities, the larvae either
starve or are consumed by predators in
this lower stretch of river (Ellsworth et
al. 2010, p. 9). Because of the extensive
modification of the lower Provo River,
in the past, most June sucker larvae
have not survived longer than 20 days
after hatching (Ellsworth et al. 2010, pp.
9–10). The upcoming PRDRP is
designed to increase survival of larvae
by providing additional rearing habitat
along the Provo River (PRDRP 2017,
entire).
Similar to the Provo River, Hobble
Creek and other tributaries of
significance (Spanish Fork River and
American Fork River) have been
extensively modified by human
activities. The hydrological regimes are
altered by multiple dams and
diversions, and the stream channels
have been straightened and dredged into
incised trapezoidal canals (Stamp et al.
2002, p. 5). These alterations resulted in
the streams becoming isolated from
their historical floodplains and having
modified flow velocities and pool-riffle
sequences (Stamp et al. 2002, p. 6).
Until recent restoration efforts were
implemented, the Hobble Creek channel
had almost no gradient and ended
without a defined connection to the lake
interface in Provo Bay due to diversion
structures and dredging. In the past, the
channel was blocked by debris that
created barriers to fish migration,
preventing adult June suckers from
accessing the main stem of Hobble
Creek.
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Located south of Provo Bay, the
Spanish Fork River is the second largest
stream inflow to Utah Lake, but the
majority of the discharge is diverted
during the irrigation season (June
through September; Psomas 2007, p.
12). Adult and larval June suckers occur
in the Spanish Fork River (UDWR 2006,
p. 2; 2007, p. 2; 2008a, p. 3; 2009a, p.
4; 2010b, p. 2); however, the seasonally
inadequate flows, poor June sucker
rearing habitat at the Utah Lake
interface, low water clarity, diversion
structures, and miles of levees along the
channel are obstacles to successful
recruitment (Stamp et al. 2002, p. 5).
Adult spawning habitat is limited to the
lower 2.7 mi (4.3 km) of the Spanish
Fork River, where it is of poor quality.
Other tributaries where spawning may
occur under favorable conditions
include the American Fork River and
Battle Creek, but streamflow to Utah
Lake in these tributaries is not available
most years; therefore, they are not found
to comprise a significant portion of June
sucker spawning habitat.
Recovery actions for the June sucker
to address impacts from water
development and habitat modification
have included water acquisition, water
flow management, and habitat
restoration (see Recovery, above). The
availability of quality spawning habitat
will improve species resiliency, and
multiple spawning tributaries will
improve species redundancy. The
positive trend in spawning population
numbers, increased number of June
suckers, and observations of young-ofyear and age-1 June suckers in the wild
indicate that water acquisition, water
flow management, and habitat
restoration have had a positive impact
on June sucker reproduction (JSRIP
2018, p. 1; see Species Abundance and
Trends, above).
Introduction of Common Carp
Historically, Utah Lake had a rich
array of rooted aquatic vegetation,
which provided nursery and rearing
habitat for young June suckers
(Heckmann et al. 1981, p. 2; Ellsworth
et al. 2010, p. 9). However, with the
introduction of common carp around
the 1880s (Sigler and Sigler 1996, pp. 5–
6), this refugial habitat largely
disappeared. Common carp physically
uproot and consume macrophytes and
disturb sediments, increasing turbidity
and decreasing light penetration, which
inhibits macrophyte establishment
(Crowl and Miller 2004, pp. 11–12).
Although not specifically identified at
the time of listing in 1986, the
successful establishment of common
carp and their effects on the Utah Lake
ecosystem are a threat to the June sucker
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(SWCA 2002, p. 19). However, the
previously described carp removal
program reduced carp populations and
increased macrophytic vegetation in the
lake, improving resiliency of the June
sucker (see Recovery, above).
Urbanization
Rapid urbanization on the floodplains
of Utah Lake tributaries stimulated
extensive flood and erosion control
activities in lake tributaries and reduced
available land for the natural
meandering of the historical river
channels (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 4).
Channelization for flood control and
additional channel manipulation for
erosion control further reduced riverine
habitat complexity and reduced the total
length of tributary rivers for spawning
and early-life-stage use (Stamp et al.
2008, pp. 12–13). It is anticipated that
further urban infrastructure
development is likely, as the
populations of cities bordering Utah
Lake and its tributaries continue to
increase.
Among the potential impacts from
continued urbanization near Utah Lake
is the potential for the construction of
bridges or other transportation
crossings. One example is the Utah
Crossing project, a causeway across
Utah Lake proposed in 2009 (Service
2009, entire). An updated application
for the project to proceed has not been
filed with Utah’s Department of
Transportation; however, as
development continues on the western
side of Utah Lake, the potential need for
some type of crossing may increase.
A large-scale project to dredge Utah
Lake, remove invasive species, and
build habitable islands for private
development was proposed in 2017, and
is under early stages of planning and
review at the State level (ULRP 2018,
entire). This project has not received
any approval or necessary permits at the
State or Federal level. We do not expect
this Utah Lake Restoration Project or the
Utah Crossing project to move forward
or impact the June sucker in the next 5–
10 years. All development projects on
Utah Lake are subject to Federal and
State laws, and require consultation
with the Service prior to beginning
work. However, such projects could
potentially impact the June sucker by
increasing habitat for predatory fish and
restricting June sucker movement in
Utah Lake (Service 2009, entire).
Additional impacts to water quality due
to the runoff from new structures could
also pose a threat to the June sucker
(Service 2009, entire). The UDWQ is
partnering with the Utah Lake
Commission and other stakeholders to
research and provide recommendations
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to improve water quality and address
impacts of urbanization and other
factors that may negatively impact
future water quality (UDWQ 2017,
entire).
Lake Water Quality
Utah Lake is hypereutrophic,
characterized by frequent algal blooms
and high turbidity (Merritt 2004, p. 14;
Psomas 2007, p. 12). The increased
turbidity, decreased water quality, and
historical change in the plant
community from macrophytedominated to algae-dominated (see
Habitat Restoration, above) affect the
fishes of Utah Lake, including the June
sucker.
High turbidity decreases the feeding
ability of many species of planktivorous
fish (Brett and Groot 1963, pp. 5–6;
Vinyard and O’Brien 1976, p. 3), and
can result in a lack of access to
sufficient food for rearing juveniles.
Thus, elevated turbidity levels may
decrease feeding efficiency of June
suckers by limiting their ability to
visually prey on preferred plankton food
types.
Utah Lake is listed on Utah’s 2016
section 303(d) list for exceedance of
State criteria for total phosphorus and
TDS concentrations (UDWQ 2018, p. 3–
7). The majority of the total phosphorus
load to Utah Lake is from point sources.
Although Utah Lake has naturally
elevated salinity levels compared to
other intermountain freshwater lakes,
the concentrations are substantially
higher today than they were before
human development (Psomas 2007, p.
8). Within Utah Lake, natural salinity
levels are due in part to high
evaporation rates, which are a function
of the lake’s large surface-area-to-depth
ratio and drainage basin characteristics.
Evaporation naturally removes about 50
percent of the total volume of water that
flows into the lake, resulting in a
doubling of the mean salt concentration
in water passing through the lake
(Fuhriman et al. 1981, p. 7).
In addition, several natural mineral
springs near the shores of Utah Lake
contribute dissolved salts, although the
magnitude and effect of these sources
has not been quantitatively evaluated
(Hatton 1932, p. 2). Evaporative losses
continue to be the main driver of
salinity concentrations in Utah Lake.
However, settlement and development
of the Utah Lake basin since the 1800s
led to increases in irrigation return
flows containing dissolved salts, which
likely exacerbated natural salinity
concentrations within Utah Lake
(Sanchez 1904, p. 1). Despite the human
influences on inflows, in recent years,
salinity levels in Utah Lake have not
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increased markedly (Psomas 2007, p.
13). The UDWQ continues to monitor
Utah Lake for any changes in salinity
concentrations.
The effects of increased salinity
concentrations on the various life stages
of June suckers are unknown. Egg size,
hatching success, and mean total length
of larvae decreased as salinity levels
increased for another lake sucker that
occurs in Nevada, the cui-ui
(Chasmistes cujus; Chatto 1979, p. 7).
However, salinity concentrations were
much higher in the cui-ui habitat than
any recorded concentrations in Utah
Lake.
Natural nutrient loading to the lake is
high due to the nutrient- and sedimentrich watershed surrounding the lake
(Fuhriman et al. 1981, p. 12).
Additionally, human development in
the drainage increased the naturally
high inflow of sediments and nutrients
to the lake (Fuhriman et al. 1981, p. 12).
Sewage effluent entering the lake
accounts for 50, 76, and 80 percent of
all nitrogen, total phosphorous, and
ortho-phosphate, respectively (Psomas
2007, p. 12). Phosphorus inputs to the
lake (297.6 tons (270.0 metric tons) per
year) exceed exports (83.5 tons (75.7
metric tons) per year) during all months
of the year. Thus, the lake acts as a
phosphorus sink, accumulating
approximately 214 tons (194.1 metric
tons) annually (Psomas 2007, p. 15).
These high nutrient loads increase the
frequency and extent of large blue-green
algal blooms, which greatly affect
overall food web dynamics in Utah Lake
(Crowl et al. 1998b, p. 13). Blue-green
algae is inedible to many zooplankton
species, which decreases zooplankton
abundance and its availability as a food
source for the June sucker (Landom et
al. 2010, p. 19). Reductions in feeding
rates translate into long-term effects
such as decreased condition, growth
rates, and fish survival (Sigler et al.
1984, p. 7; Hayes et al. 1992, p. 9).
Furthermore, the increased algal
biomass limits available light for
submergent vegetation (Scheffer 1998, p.
19), thus reducing refugial habitat for
early life stages of June sucker. The
frequency and size of algal blooms may
be increasing based on large-scale algal
blooms that occurred in 2016 and 2017
(UDWQ 2017, p. 3).
Although there is a significant amount
of research indicating that algal blooms
can be harmful to many types of fish, we
do not have direct evidence regarding
the degree or manner in which they
impact June suckers in Utah Lake
(Psomas 2007, p. 14; Crowl 2015,
entire). No fish kills were documented
during recent bloom events, but poststocking monitoring of June sucker has
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noted that, during algal blooms, fish
movement decreased measurably
(Goldsmith et al. 2017, p. 13).
The average Utah Lake TDS
concentration is about 900 parts per
million (ppm)/milligrams per liter (mg/
L), but large variations occur, depending
on the water year (Hickman and Thurin
2007, p. 9). There is no evidence of
direct mortality to June suckers due to
higher salinity levels, but it is possible
that increased salinity, when combined
with increased nutrient input and
turbidity, may negatively affect June
suckers by reducing zooplankton and
refugial habitat abundance as described
above. Further study of June sucker
responses during high salinity events is
needed to better understand this
relationship.
Water quality concerns in Utah Lake
are being addressed through a largescale study and the formation of a
steering committee and science panel to
develop recommendations for Utah Lake
water quality for the benefit of June
sucker (UDWQ 2017, entire).
Riverine Water Quality
Prior to 1986, the year in which we
listed the June sucker, riverine water
quality was heavily impacted by water
withdrawal, agricultural and municipal
effluents, and habitat modification. The
water withdrawals reduced the ability of
the rivers to effectively transport
sediments and other materials from the
river channel. Furthermore,
withdrawals influenced temperature,
dissolved oxygen, and pollutant and
nutrient concentrations (Stamp et al.
2008, p. 18). Diverted streams with
reduced, shallow summertime base
flows are very susceptible to solar
heating and can experience lethally
warm water temperatures (above 80
degrees Fahrenheit (°F) or 27 degrees
Celsius (°C), depending on life stage).
High water temperature, especially if
combined with stagnant flow velocities,
can lead to low dissolved oxygen levels
in streams where flows have been
reduced (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 19).
Artificially high temperatures may
also occur in streams where flow regime
alterations and channelization have
limited the recruitment of woody
riparian vegetation, thereby reducing
the amount of streamside shading
(Stamp et al. 2008, p. 19). Subsequently,
extensive colonization by filamentous
algae can occur in warmer temperatures,
creating extreme daily dissolved oxygen
fluctuations that are harmful to June
sucker (Service 1994, p. 12).
Agricultural and municipal effluents
enrich production of algae, further
impacting daily dissolved oxygen levels.
These effluents can cause fish kills if
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201
significant runoff from agricultural and
municipal properties occurs during low
flow periods. Furthermore, heavy algal
growth can cause the armoring of
spawning gravels and aid in the
accumulation of fine sediments that
degrade spawning habitat quality
(Stamp et al. 2008, p. 32).
The Provo River is listed on Utah’s
2016 section 303(d) list for impairments
harmful to cold-water aquatic life.
Additionally, water quality is poor in
the river’s lower reaches during summer
low-flow periods due to low dissolved
oxygen levels and elevated temperatures
(Stamp et al. 2008, p. 34). It is likely that
the recent supplementation of flows for
June sucker recovery in the Provo River
are minimizing the risk of lethal
temperatures and dissolved oxygen
fluctuations by providing water during
critical periods and maintaining base
flows throughout the summer while
larvae are developing. The planned
PRDRP will provide additional water
storage and refugial habitat (see
Recovery, above).
Hobble Creek is not on the Utah
section 303(d) list as an impaired
waterbody. However, there are
indications that total phosphorus and
temperature may be problematic in
Hobble Creek during certain times of the
year (Stamp et al. 2009, pp. 22–23).
Average total phosphorous
concentration is 0.06 ppm/mg/L, which
exceeds the Utah indicator value of 0.05
ppm/mg/L (Stamp et al. 2009, p. 24). In
addition, creek temperatures exceed
68 °F (20 °C), which is the State coldwater fishery standard; this temperature
increase typically occurs during
summer days when air temperatures are
high and flow in the channel is low
(Stamp et al. 2009, p. 26). Similar to the
Provo River, the augmentation of stream
flows in Hobble Creek has likely
minimized the risk of lethal
temperatures by providing flows during
critical periods.
Effects of Climate Change
The predicted increase in global
average temperatures is expected to
negatively affect water quality in
shallow lakes (Mooij et al. 2007, p. 2).
Turbid shallow lakes such as Utah Lake
are likely to have higher summer
chlorophyll-a concentrations with a
stronger dominance of blue-green algae
and reduced zooplankton abundance
from the effects of climate change
(Mooij et al. 2007, p. 5). This could
affect June sucker food resources since
zooplankton are the primary food source
for the species.
In Utah, an increase in the intensity
of naturally occurring future droughts
and unprecedented warming are
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expected (Frankson et al. 2017, p. 2).
Projected changes in winter
precipitation include an increase in the
fractions falling as rain, rather than
snow, and potentially decreasing
snowpack water storage (Frankson et al.
2017, p. 2). These changes in timing and
amount of flow could affect June sucker
spawning, because the spawning cues of
increased runoff and water temperature,
on which the June sucker relies to
determine spawning time, would
potentially occur earlier in the year.
As changes to water availability and
timing occur in the future, the JSRIP
will need to coordinate reservoir
operations to ensure timely releases. If
runoff and upstream reservoir volumes
are insufficient, peak and base flows
desired in spawning tributaries will be
reduced. This, in turn, would negatively
impact the early season attractant flows
needed by spawning adults, and
potentially limit flows needed by larval
suckers to move into downstream
rearing habitats. As previously
described, the JSRIP partnership has
acquired 13,000 acre-ft (16,035,240 m3)
of permanent water for the Provo River
and 8,500 acre-ft (10,485,000 m3) for
Hobble Creek. Flows in both systems are
intensively managed with consideration
for the June sucker. Still, additional
permanent water acquisitions may
become necessary to secure water that
can be used to supplement flows during
critical spawning and rearing periods as
the climate shifts.
Summary of Habitat-Based Threats
Water development and habitat
modification, common carp,
urbanization, and water quality are
threats to the June sucker. Additionally,
potential increased temperatures and
decreased precipitation caused by
climate change may impact water
quality. However, since the time of
listing in 1986, the JSRIP partnership
has implemented the following recovery
actions: (1) 13,000 acre-ft of permanent
water for instream flows are secured to
benefit the June sucker; (2) a mechanism
for annually recommending and
providing flows for June sucker
spawning was implemented; (3) the
common carp population was
suppressed, resulting in measurable
habitat improvement in Utah Lake; (4)
the impacts of urbanization are being
considered through active research and
planning; (5) a landscape-scale stream
channel and delta restoration for the
Provo River is being implemented; and
(6) future water quality and availability
are actively being studied and
prioritized by the JSRIP, UDWQ, and the
Utah Lake Commission (see Recovery,
above). We find that the severity of
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these threats has decreased since the
time of listing; adaptive management of
these threats is ongoing, and increased
resiliency and redundancy are evident
as indicated by increasing survival rates
and overall population numbers.
Commercial Fishing
Commercial fishing, including fishing
for June suckers, was historically an
important use of Utah Lake (Heckman et
al. 1981, p. 9). Some commercial fishing
for June suckers occurred through the
1970s, but on a very limited basis.
Shortly thereafter, commercial harvest
for the species largely stopped due to
the limited population size. Currently,
the June sucker is a prohibited species
and cannot be harvested (Utah
Administrative Code R657–14–8).
Consequently, commercial or
recreational fishing is no longer
considered a threat to the species.
Regulated collections of June suckers for
scientific purposes occur at a very
limited level, but do not pose a threat
to the species at the population level.
Disease
Neither disease nor the presence of
parasites were considered threats to the
June sucker at the time of listing (51 FR
10851; March 31, 1986). Although
parasites likely exist in June sucker
habitat, there is no evidence that June
suckers at the individual or population
levels are compromised by the presence
of parasites. Fish health inspections are
regularly conducted on June suckers at
the FES hatchery and in Red Butte
Reservoir, and no known pathogens
have been detected (JSRIP 2018c,
entire). At this time, the best available
information does not indicate that the
presence of parasites or disease
negatively affects the June sucker.
Predation by Nonnative Fishes
Predation by nonnative fishes poses a
threat to the successful recruitment of
young suckers into the spawning adult
life stage (Radant and Hickman 1984, p.
6) and was a major factor for listing the
June sucker as endangered (51 FR
10851; March 31, 1986). The
introduction of predatory nonnative
fishes significantly altered the native
Utah Lake fish assemblage. Historically,
Bonneville cutthroat trout
(Oncorhynchus clarkii) was the toplevel piscivore (fish-eating predator) in
Utah Lake; however, 30 fish species
have been introduced since the late
1800s. Twelve nonnative fish species
have established self-sustaining
populations, and seven of these are
piscivorous (SWCA 2002, p. 14). As a
result, June suckers face an array of
predator species, including white bass
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(Morone chrysops), walleye (Sander
vitreus), largemouth bass (Micropterus
salmoides), black crappie (Pomoxis
nigromaculatus), black bullhead
(Ameiurus melas), northern pike (Esox
lucius), and channel catfish (Ictalurus
punctatus).
Predation by nonnative fishes
primarily targets the early life stages of
June suckers. Adult June suckers are
larger than the gape size of the average
predatory fish and, therefore, are
significantly less vulnerable. At the time
of listing, the effects of predation were
exacerbated by the lack of vegetated
refuge habitat within Utah Lake.
White bass may have the highest
potential to limit recruitment of young
suckers into the spawning adult
population (SWCA 2002, p. 132;
Landom et al. 2010, p. 18). White bass
become piscivorous at age-0 in Utah
Lake (Radant and Sakaguchi 1981, p. 12;
Landom et al. 2010, pp. 11–12) and are
the most abundant piscivore (UDWR
2010, p. 9). The white bass population
in Utah Lake could consume as many as
550 million fish of various species
throughout the course of 1 year
(Landom et al. 2010, pp. 8–10).
However, it appears that restored habitat
with complex aquatic vegetation
provides the June sucker with effective
refuge from white bass. Thus, habitat
restoration is likely paramount to
young-of-year June sucker resiliency
and survival (see Recovery, above).
The recent illegal introduction of
northern pike in Utah Lake raises
concerns similar to white bass. Northern
pike predominantly feed on juvenile
fish; predation on adults is less than 1
percent (Reynolds and Gaeta 2017, p.
12). Thus far, the number of northern
pike in the lake has not measurably
increased, and active removal efforts
continue to suppress populations
(Reynolds and Gaeta 2017, p. 13).
However, a northern pike population
model shows potential for a high degree
of population increase with potential for
a high negative impact on the June
sucker population by the year 2040
(Gaeta et al. 2018, entire). Despite these
modeling results, unique factors
impacting northern pike population
dynamics in Utah Lake are still not
understood. Recent habitat
improvements in the lake from common
carp removal (see Recovery, above) may
help mitigate northern pike predation
by providing refugia for June suckers.
Additionally, high levels of total
dissolved solids (TDS), such as those
found in Utah Lake, may suppress
northern pike spawning and
development (Scannell and Jacobs 2001,
entire; Koel 2011, p. 7). The JSRIP is
funding research to clarify this
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relationship and to determine a course
of action to prevent northern pike from
becoming a greater threat to June sucker
in the future.
While predation from nonnative
species remains a threat, spawning
populations of June suckers and the
number of untagged fish (e.g., possibly
natural recruitment) are increasing.
Adaptive management of nonnative fish
is ongoing.
In addition to nonnative predatory
fishes, avian predation on June suckers
has been documented and primarily
occurs when stocked June suckers are
first released into the lake (Goldsmith et
al., p. 12). Predation is primarily from
pelicans, and the amount varies based
on location of release, time of year, and
time of day of the June sucker release
(Goldsmith et al., p. 12). When possible,
staff releasing stocked fish into Utah
Lake drive off waiting pelicans, and do
releases in the fall and at night, when
predation is lowest (UDWR 2017, p. 3).
The best available information does not
indicate that pelicans or other avian
predators are a threat to June suckers
once the fish are established in Utah
Lake.
Existing Regulatory Mechanisms
Under this factor, we examine the
stressors identified within the other
factors as ameliorated or exacerbated by
any existing regulatory mechanisms or
conservation efforts. Section 4(b)(1)(A)
of the Act requires that the Service take
into account those efforts, if any, being
made by any State or foreign nation, or
any political subdivision of a State or
foreign nation, to protect endangered or
threatened species. We consider
relevant Federal, State, and Tribal laws,
regulations, and other such binding
legal mechanisms that may ameliorate
or exacerbate any of the threats we
describe in threat analyses under the
other four factors or otherwise enhance
the species’ conservation. Our
consideration of these mechanisms is
described below.
As a listed species, the primary
regulatory mechanism for protection of
the June sucker is through section 9(a)
of the Act, as administered by the
Service, which broadly prohibits
import, export, take (e.g., to harm,
harass, kill, capture), and possession of
the species. Additional regulatory
mechanisms are provided through
section 7(a)(2) of the Act, which states
that each Federal agency shall, in
consultation with and with the
assistance of the Secretary, insure that
any action authorized, funded, or
carried out by the agency is not likely
to jeopardize the continued existence of
any endangered species or threatened
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species or result in the destruction or
adverse modification of habitat of such
species that is determined by the
Secretary, after soliciting comments
from affected States, counties, and
equivalent jurisdictions, to be critical.
Section 10(a)(1)(A) of the Act provides
a mechanism for research and
propagation of listed species for
recovery purposes through a permitting
system that allows incidental take of a
listed species in the course of scientific
projects that will benefit the species as
a whole. For non-Federal actions,
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Act authorizes
the Service to issue a permit allowing
take of species provided that the taking
is incidental to, and not the purpose of,
the carrying out of an otherwise lawful
activity. Section 10(a)(2)(A) of the Act
requires that a conservation plan, which
is part of an application for an
incidental take permit, describe the
impact of the taking and identify steps
to minimize and mitigate the impacts.
The Act will continue to provide
protection to the June sucker after
downlisting to threatened status, for as
long as it remains on the List. The June
sucker and its habitat will also continue
to receive consideration and protection
through the other regulatory
mechanisms discussed below.
The NEPA requires Federal agencies
to evaluate the potential effects of their
proposed actions on the quality of the
human environment and requires the
preparation of an EIS whenever projects
may result in significant impacts.
Federal agencies must identify adverse
environmental impacts of their
proposed actions and develop
alternatives that undergo the scrutiny of
other public and private organizations
as a part of their decision-making
process. However, impacts may still
occur under NEPA, and the
implementation of conservation
measures is largely voluntary. Actions
evaluated under NEPA only affect the
June sucker if they address potential
impacts to the species or its habitat.
The Fish and Wildlife Coordination
Act (16 U.S.C. 661 et seq.) requires that
Federal agencies sponsoring, funding, or
permitting activities related to water
resource development projects request
review of these actions by the Service
and the State natural resources
management agency. Similar to caveats
noted for NEPA, actions considered
under the Fish and Wildlife
Coordination Act are only relevant if
they potentially impact the species or its
habitat. The Fish and Wildlife
Coordination Act does not provide
strong or broad protections for listed
species, but it provides an additional
layer of review for projects likely to
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203
impact the June sucker and works in
concert with other regulatory
mechanisms.
Section 101(a) of the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act (i.e., Clean Water
Act; 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.) states that
the objective of this law is to restore and
maintain the chemical, physical, and
biological integrity of the Nation’s
waters and provide the means to assure
protection of fish and wildlife. This
statute contributes to the protection of
the June sucker through provisions for
water quality standards, protection from
the discharge of harmful pollutants and
contaminants (sections 303(c), 304(a),
and 402), and protection from the
discharge of dredged or fill material into
all waters, including certain wetlands
(section 404).
The Clean Water Act requires every
State to establish and maintain water
quality standards designed to protect,
restore, and preserve water quality in
the State. However, Utah Lake has failed
to meet water quality standards due to
exceedance of total phosphorus and
TDS concentrations (Psomas 2007, p.
11), and it is listed as a section 303(d)
‘‘impaired’’ water (Utah Lake
Commission 2018, p. 7). Poor water
quality in Utah Lake could alter food
availability for the June sucker and
contribute to increases in harmful algal
bloom events and toxin concentrations
from those events, which could increase
the risk of large-scale June sucker
mortality events. To meet Clean Water
Act requirements, the UDWQ and the
Utah Lake Commission are studying
water quality in Utah Lake. They have
a steering committee and science panel
for the purposes of providing
recommendations to improve water
quality standards in Utah Lake (Utah
Lake Commission 2018, entire).
June suckers receive some protections
at the State level. Under Utah
Administrative Code R657–14–8, June
suckers may not be harvested, and if
caught must be immediately returned
alive and unharmed to the water from
which they were taken.
When this rule is effective (see DATES,
above), the June sucker will continue to
receive protection under the Act as a
threatened species. The June sucker will
also continue to receive protection
under the other aforementioned
regulatory mechanisms. Despite these
existing regulatory mechanisms, the
threats discussed under the other factors
continue to affect the June sucker such
that it now meets the definition of a
threatened species rather than an
endangered species.
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Cumulative Threats
The June sucker faces threats
primarily from degraded habitat and
water quality, water availability,
predation from nonnative species, and
urbanization. Furthermore, existing
regulatory mechanisms do not
adequately address these threats. The
June sucker also faces a future threat of
climate change, which may exacerbate
other existing threats. These factors may
act cumulatively on the species. For
example, urbanization can result in
increased pressure on existing water
resources as well as degraded water
quality, which, when combined with
rising temperatures and decreased
rainfall, can result in less available
water, increased water temperatures,
and decreased habitat quality. These
factors can cause reduced availability of
food for the June sucker, decreased
reproductive success, and increased
mortality.
However, since the time of listing (51
FR 10851; March 31, 1986), all of the
identified threats to the June sucker
have either improved measurably or are
being adaptively managed according to
the best available scientific information
for the benefit of the June sucker (see
Recovery, above). Conservation
measures, including establishing refuge
populations, stocking of June suckers in
Utah Lake, habitat restoration projects
on spawning tributaries, and nonnative
fish removal, have resulted in increased
numbers of June suckers in the lake,
evidence of wild reproduction, and
improved habitat within the lake and its
tributaries. As a result, resiliency,
redundancy, and representation have all
improved. Continued research and
monitoring provide an avenue to
respond to new and evolving threats,
such as the effects of climate change, to
recovery progress. The existence of
refuge populations ensures that, should
a stochastic event or extreme
combination of existing threats greatly
impact the population in Utah Lake, the
June sucker would not become extinct.
This resilience to the cumulative
threats is due largely to the actions of an
active, committed, and well-funded
recovery partnership. The JSRIP is the
driving force behind the reduction in
threats, habitat improvement, and
population augmentation, and the JSRIP
is able to adaptively manage new
stressors as they arise. The improvement
of conditions and success of the JSRIP
can be measured via the increased
number of spawning June suckers, the
positive population trend, and the high
level of year-to-year survival.
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Summary of Comments and
Recommendations
In the proposed rule published in the
Federal Register on November 26, 2019
(84 FR 65080), we requested that all
interested parties submit written
comments on our proposal to downlist
the June sucker by January 27, 2020. We
also contacted appropriate Federal and
State agencies, scientific experts and
organizations, and other interested
parties and invited them to comment on
the proposal. Newspaper notices
inviting general public comment were
published in the Salt Tribune (Salt Lake
City) and Daily Herald (Provo). We did
not receive any requests for a public
hearing. All substantive information
provided during the comment period is
either incorporated directly into this
final rule or is addressed below.
Peer Reviewer Comments
In accordance with our joint policy on
peer review published on July 1, 1994
(59 FR 34270) and our August 22, 2016,
memorandum (USFWS 2016, entire)
updating and clarifying the role of peer
review of listing actions under the Act,
we solicited expert opinion from three
knowledgeable individuals with
scientific expertise and familiarity with
the June sucker, its habitat, its biological
needs and potential threats, or
principles of conservation biology. The
purpose of peer review is to ensure that
our listing and reclassification
determinations are based on
scientifically sound data, assumptions,
and analyses. We received responses
from two peer reviewers.
We reviewed all comments we
received from the peer reviewers for
substantive issues and new information
regarding the proposed downlisting of
the June sucker. The peer reviewers
provided additional information,
clarifications, and suggestions to
improve the final rule, which we
include in this rule or address in the
responses to comments below. One peer
reviewer favored the downlisting of the
June sucker and provided only small,
technical edits to the document. The
other peer reviewer also provided
technical edits and suggestions. This
reviewer also expressed concern that
there was not enough detail in the
proposed rule to determine whether
June sucker meets the definition of a
threatened species, and stated that many
of the known threats should be more
thoroughly mitigated before downlisting
should be considered. Substantive
comments from this reviewer are
addressed below, and minor editorial
comments were resolved in the text of
the rule itself.
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(1) Comment: The reviewer suggested
that there may be additional information
that could contribute to the accuracy
and completeness of our description
and analysis of the biology, habitat,
population trends, and historical and
current distribution of the June sucker.
The reviewer stated there is quantitative
information on population dynamics
and trends that was not considered in
the proposed rule.
Our Response: The reviewer did not
specify what information may be
missing from the rule or provide
information on population dynamics
and trends that we failed to consider.
We were unable to find additional
population or biological information
about the June sucker that we had not
reviewed when the proposed rule was
published. Some additional information
has become available since publication
of the proposed rule, and it is included
in the text of this rule where relevant.
(2) Comment: The reviewer
commented that we referred the reader
to the final listing rule and recovery
plan, respectively published in 1986
and 1999, but that these documents are
relatively old, and substantial new
information has accrued since their
appearance, which we reference later.
Our Response: The final listing rule
(51 FR 10851; March 31, 1986) and the
recovery plan (Service 1999) represent
the only two Service-published
documents with significant information
on the biology and habitat of the June
sucker, until the proposed rule was
published in 2019 (84 FR 65080;
November 26, 2019). We referenced the
older documents in the proposed rule
because the proposed rule itself also
served as the 5-year review and our
most recent update to those documents.
As the reviewer notes, many other and
more recent references are available for
additional information and are cited in
the text of both the proposed and final
rules.
(3) Comment: The reviewer stated that
we did not adequately consider some of
the threats to June sucker in our
analysis, particularly predation by white
bass on juvenile June suckers, avian
predation, and the reliance on hatcheryproduced fish to maintain the
population, as natural reproduction and
recruitment are not sufficient. The
reviewer did not provide any additional
information to support these comments.
Our Response: The November 26,
2019, proposed rule (84 FR 65080), as
well as this final rule, recognize that the
June sucker currently relies on stocking
to maintain the population in Utah
Lake. We do not find this reliance to be
in conflict with a ‘‘threatened’’ status
determination, as we have reasonable
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certainty based on partner agreements
that stocking will continue until the
Utah Lake population can be shown to
be self-sustaining. Continued and
planned recovery actions, such as
habitat restoration and removal of
nonnative species, are likely to continue
to have a positive effect on
reproduction, recruitment, and survival,
and the system is monitored intensely to
detect any rising threats or reversal of
recovery progress. As we discuss above
in this final rule, the best available
information does not indicate that white
bass or avian predation constitute a
threat to the June sucker in Utah Lake
under current conditions (which
include ongoing recovery actions, like
stocking and nonnative fish removal).
Some predation does occur, and we
have added text regarding methods used
to reduce pelican predation on June
suckers while they are being stocked, as
that is the time the largest number of
fish are vulnerable to avian predation.
If, in the future, these factors are shown
to prevent the June sucker population in
Utah Lake from being self-sustaining,
they will need to be addressed before
we can achieve full recovery.
(4) Comment: The reviewer stated that
we assume that capture of untagged fish
or fish of ‘‘unknown origin’’ results in
population estimates and other
demographic parameters that are
incorrect (low), but adds that a
population estimate does not depend on
tagged fish only and the estimate should
include the total number of fish, tagged
and untagged.
Our Response: The reviewer is
correct. The number we present as the
known spawning population is not
meant to represent a population
estimate, but to provide the number of
recorded individual June sucker
spawners detected using PIT tags and
antennae. That number is the minimum
number of spawning adults we can be
certain are surviving in the lake, and it
does not account for fish that did not
spawn in the years analyzed, fish
without tags, or tagged fish that were
not recorded by monitoring equipment.
Due to the lack of information regarding
untagged fish or Utah Lake fish that are
not spawning, and the various ways the
data have been collected, we do not
attempt to extrapolate the number of
recorded spawning June suckers into a
full population estimate. We have
removed all references to a population
estimate in this document and clarified
the nature of the numbers provided.
(5) Comment: The reviewer stated that
we have not shown adequately that
recovery criteria are met in order to
allow for a downlisting, and cited the
need for actions such as permanent,
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legally assured flows for spawning,
increased habitat, and a permanent
continuous plan to remove carp and
combat future novel predators that may
be introduced.
Our Response: The Recovery
discussion in the proposed rule (84 FR
65080, November 26, 2019, pp. 84 FR
65084–65087), as well as in this final
rule (above), goes into detail regarding
the existing downlisting criteria and
how they have been met (if they have)
or why they are outdated or irrelevant.
The legal standard for downlisting is
whether the species meets the definition
of a ‘‘threatened species’’ that is, it is
likely to become an endangered species
within the foreseeable future throughout
all or a significant portion of its range.
Due to an exceptional track record and
proven recovery measures, we are
assured that the commitment of our
partners and the JSRIP will continue,
recovery actions and responses to
threats will be implemented, and the
existing agreements mean that June
sucker is no longer currently in danger
of extinction through all or a significant
portion of its range. The reviewer’s
comments regarding downlisting criteria
more closely represent the definition of
full recovery and delisting than for
downlisting the species to threatened
status.
(6) Comment: The reviewer
commented that we did not include all
necessary and pertinent information to
support our arguments, and they
identified a number of references for
June sucker that we did not cite in our
proposed rule that were found through
an internet search. The reviewer did not
state that these particular references had
information that would impact our
status evaluation; in fact, the reviewer
said that they had not read them. The
reviewer only stated that they believed
the fact that they could find references
we did not cite meant we had not been
thorough in our analysis.
Our Response: The literature cited in
the proposed rule (84 FR 65080;
November 26, 2019) constitutes the best
scientific and commercial information
available regarding the downlisting of
the June sucker. Additional literature,
including all of the citations provided
by the reviewer, were previously
evaluated as part of the rule
development, and they remain on file as
part of the record. A significant amount
of literature on the June sucker and Utah
Lake exists, some of which is outdated
or redundant. Some was not necessary
to include, as it provides a level of
detail on aspects of June sucker biology
that was superfluous to reaching a status
determination. For the sake of clarity
and brevity, we did not cite every
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205
existing piece of literature on the
species, but limited our citations to the
best scientific and commercial
information available regarding the
status of, and threats to, the June sucker.
However, no piece of literature that we
found might have bearing on our
analysis, either positively or negatively,
was excluded from our review,
including the citations provided by the
commenter.
Public Comments
We received 19 letters from the public
that provided comments on our
November 26, 2019, proposed rule (84
FR 65080). Twelve of the commenters
expressed their explicit support for the
proposed downlisting, and three
expressed their opposition to it. Four
commenters either did not explicitly
state their position or expressed general
concerns that threats should be
addressed if the June sucker is to be
downlisted. Relevant and substantive
public comments that have not been
addressed through changes to the text
are addressed in the following
summary.
(1) Comment: One commenter
objected to the proposed downlisting on
the basis that too many threats to the
species (including climate change and
carp) still exist to justify reduced
protections, and stated that increased
human development inevitably results
in death or extinction of animals in the
area.
Our Response: We agree that a
number of threats still impact the June
sucker and need to be continually
managed for the species’ protection and
recovery. This rule analyzes adaptive
measures for all known threats,
including water management plans and
habitat restoration to mitigate the effects
of climate change; long-term
management plans for carp and other
nonnative, invasive species; and
protections that prevent future
development from increasing the June
sucker’s risk of becoming endangered
again. All exceptions from take
restrictions included in the 4(d) rule, as
described below under Provisions of the
4(d) Rule, are tied directly to the benefit
of June sucker recovery and the health
of its native habitat. We are confident in
the JSRIP’s and our partners’
commitment to following through with
existing plans and continuing to manage
the June sucker in accordance with
recovery objectives, as they have for the
last 18 years. Should threats to the June
sucker increase to the point where there
is an increased risk of extinction, the
Service can and will reevaluate its
status and protections accordingly.
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(2) Comment: One commenter
suggested removing all June suckers and
other desirable native fishes from Utah
Lake to a safe holding facility,
exterminating the nonnative species,
and then reintroducing native species
back into the lake.
Our Response: This comment does
not relate to the status of June sucker
now, but to potential ways to continue
recovery in the future. However, due to
the size of Utah Lake and unique
hydrological factors, removal of all
nonnative fishes from the system, even
using strong piscicides, is not feasible.
Mechanical removal is not able to
capture all nonnative fish at a rate that
would prevent reestablishment, and
suitable piscicides are not available in
enough quantity to eradicate all
nonnative fish from the lake, even if a
practical and comprehensive
application method could be found.
(3) Comment: One commenter
requested that we update the June
sucker recovery plan in order to specify
what needs to be done to reach full
recovery and delisting.
Our Response: An update of the June
sucker recovery plan, including
quantitative delisting criteria, is
underway, and a draft will be published
for public comment at a later date, after
this rule goes into effect (see DATES,
above).
(4) Comment: We received several
comments requesting that provisions be
added to the 4(d) rule regarding State
management of recreational fisheries of
Utah Lake and for education and
outreach efforts for June sucker and
Utah Lake. In addition to official public
comments, both of these provisions
were also informally requested by
recovery partners at JSRIP meetings.
Our Response: We have added the
requested provisions to the final 4(d)
rule; both provisions will contribute to
June sucker conservation.
Summary of Changes From the
Proposed Rule
As explained above under Summary
of Comments and Recommendations,
we made several changes in this final
rule in response to public comments we
received on our November 26, 2019,
proposed rule (84 FR 65080). The
primary changes are to add exceptions
to the prohibitions on take in the 4(d)
rule for recreational fisheries
management and for education and
outreach. See ‘‘Recreational Fisheries
Management’’ and ‘‘Education and
Outreach,’’ under Provisions of the 4(d)
Rule, below, for a description of these
take exceptions. These changes address
requests made both in public comments
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and by our recovery partners at JSRIP
meetings.
Additionally, in response to a peerreview comment, in this final rule, we
do not attempt to extrapolate the
number of recorded spawning June
suckers into a full population estimate;
we have removed all references to a
population estimate in this document
and clarified the nature of the numbers
provided. We also cite more recent
information (published since the
November 26, 2019, publication of the
proposed rule), where it is relevant, in
this final rule.
Finally, we made nonsubstantive,
editorial changes, such as to explain a
cross-reference to other regulations, to
the text of the 4(d) rule to improve its
clarity.
Determination of June Sucker’s Status
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533)
and its implementing regulations (50
CFR part 424) set forth the procedures
for determining whether a species meets
the definition of ‘‘endangered species’’
or ‘‘threatened species.’’ The Act defines
an ‘‘endangered species’’ as a species
that is ‘‘in danger of extinction
throughout all or a significant portion of
its range,’’ and a ‘‘threatened species’’ as
a species that is ‘‘likely to become an
endangered species within the
foreseeable future throughout all or a
significant portion of its range.’’ The Act
requires that we determine whether a
species meets the definition of
‘‘endangered species’’ or ‘‘threatened
species’’ because of any of the following
factors: (A) The present or threatened
destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat or range; (B)
overutilization for commercial,
recreational, scientific, or educational
purposes; (C) disease or predation; (D)
the inadequacy of existing regulatory
mechanisms; or (E) other natural or
manmade factors affecting its continued
existence.
As required by the Act, we considered
the five factors in assessing whether the
June sucker is an endangered or
threatened species throughout all of its
range. We carefully examined the best
scientific and commercial information
available regarding the past, present,
and future threats faced by the June
sucker. We reviewed the information
available in our files and other available
published and unpublished
information, and we consulted with
recognized experts and State agencies.
We evaluated the changes in resiliency,
redundancy, and representation for the
June sucker since the time of listing (51
FR 10851; March 31, 1986).
June sucker resiliency has improved
since the time of listing, with an
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increase in the wild spawning
population of at least ten-fold, a positive
population trend, and increases in both
the quality and quantity of habitat. We
project that these conditions will
continue to improve based on plans to
continue successful management
actions and implement new projects,
such as the PRDRP and the Utah Water
Quality Study. Redundancy in June
sucker is assured by the existence of two
new populations, including the refuge
population maintained at FES hatchery
and an additional naturally selfsustaining population in Red Butte
Reservoir, as well as the presence of
water flows in at least two spawning
tributaries each year (Provo River and
Hobble Creek), with up to five spawning
tributaries available in good water years.
Prior to the June sucker’s listing, there
were no refuge populations, and in low
water years, there might be no available
spawning tributaries with water
throughout the summer. Representation
for the June sucker exists in the form of
genetic diversity in the breeding and
stocking program, which has preserved
a high degree of genetic variation in the
fish stocked in Utah Lake since listing.
Based on these elements, we find that
overall viability for the June sucker has
improved since the time of listing.
Factor B is not considered a threat to
the June sucker due to the fact that
harvest and collection of the species are
strictly regulated and very limited. June
suckers are affected by loss and
degradation of habitat (Factor A),
predation (Factor C), and other effects of
human activities, including climate
change (Factor E). Existing regulatory
mechanisms outside of the Act (Factor
D) do not address all the identified
threats to the June sucker, as indicated
by the fact that these threats continue to
affect the species throughout its range.
However, recovery actions have
significantly improved viability of the
June sucker and reduced the immediacy
of these threats.
Status Throughout All of Its Range
After evaluating threats to the species
and assessing the cumulative effects of
the threats under the section 4(a)(1)
factors, we find that the threats of loss
and degradation of habitat (Factor A),
predation (Factor C), and other effects of
human activities including climate
change (Factor E) are still acting on the
June sucker. Existing regulatory
mechanisms outside of the Act (Factor
D) do not address all the identified
threats to the June sucker, as indicated
by the fact that these threats continue to
affect the species throughout its range,
although with less intensity than at the
time of listing (51 FR 10851; March 31,
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1986). However, given increases in
population numbers due to sustained
recovery efforts by the JSRIP over the
last 18 years, we determine the June
sucker no longer meets the Act’s
definition of an endangered species. We
therefore proceed with determining
whether the June sucker meets the Act’s
definition of a threatened species.
Based solely on biological factors, we
consider 25 years to be the foreseeable
future within which we can reasonably
determine that the future threats and the
June sucker’s response to those threats
is likely. This time period includes
multiple generations of the species and
allows adequate time for impacts from
conservation efforts or changes in
threats to be indicated through
population response.
The foreseeable future for the
individual threats vary. Management
and recovery progress of the population
and its threats are overseen by the
JSRIP. The charter of this program states
that the purpose of the JSRIP is to
recover the June sucker to the point at
which it no longer requires protections
under the Act, and to do so based on
recovery guidance provided by the
Service using the best available
scientific and biological information in
an adaptive management approach.
Because the JSRIP is committed to
achieving recovery and the partners
have committed to continued funding,
threats to the June sucker will continue
to be adaptively managed by the JSRIP
until such time as we find it no longer
requires protections under the Act. For
at least as long as the species remains
listed, the JSRIP will continue to
manage June sucker threats and
population health and trends in an
adaptive way, ensuring that the species
is extremely unlikely to go extinct. The
Service will then rely on management
actions that have been put in place by
the JSRIP, and other factors such as a
population viability analysis, habitat
improvements, and future long-term
agreements, when delisting is being
considered. This long-term management
(e.g., permanent water acquisition,
breeding program, stocking, and
nonnative fish removal) ensures
continued stability in the absence of the
protections of the Act after the June
sucker reaches full recovery.
Although population numbers have
increased and the intensity of the
identified threats have decreased, our
analysis indicates that, because of the
remaining threats and stressors, the
species meets the Act’s definition of a
threatened species. Thus, after assessing
the best available information, we
conclude that the June sucker is not
currently in danger of extinction, but is
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still likely to become endangered within
the foreseeable future throughout all of
its range.
Status Throughout a Significant Portion
of Its Range
Under the Act and our implementing
regulations, a species may warrant
listing if it is in danger of extinction or
likely to become so in the foreseeable
future throughout all or a significant
portion of its range. The court in Center
for Biological Diversity v. Everson, 2020
WL 437289 (D.D.C. Jan. 28, 2020)
(Center for Biological Diversity), vacated
the aspect of the Final Policy on
Interpretation of the Phrase ‘‘Significant
Portion of Its Range’’ in the Endangered
Species Act’s Definitions of
‘‘Endangered Species’’ and ‘‘Threatened
Species’’ (79 FR 37578; July 1, 2014)
that provided that the Services do not
undertake an analysis of significant
portions of a species’ range if the
species warrants listing as threatened
throughout all of its range. Therefore,
we proceed to evaluating whether the
species is endangered in a significant
portion of its range—that is, whether
there is any portion of the species’ range
for which both (1) the portion is
significant; and, (2) the species is in
danger of extinction in that portion.
Depending on the case, it might be more
efficient for us to address the
‘‘significance’’ question or the ‘‘status’’
question first. We can choose to address
either question first. Regardless of
which question we address first, if we
reach a negative answer with respect to
the first question that we address, we do
not need to evaluate the other question
for that portion of the species’ range.
Following the court’s holding in
Center for Biological Diversity, we now
consider whether there are any
significant portions of the species’ range
where the species is in danger of
extinction now (i.e., endangered). In
undertaking this analysis for the June
sucker, we choose to address the status
question first—we consider information
pertaining to the geographic distribution
of both the species and the threats that
the species faces to identify any
portions of the range where the species
is endangered.
The June sucker is a narrow endemic
that functions as a single, contiguous
population and occurs within a small
area that includes one lake and
associated tributaries. Thus, there is no
biologically meaningful way to break
this limited range into portions, and the
threats that the species faces affect the
species throughout its entire range. This
means that no portions of the species’
range have a different status from its
rangewide status. Therefore, no portion
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207
of the species’ range can provide a basis
for determining that the species is in
danger of extinction in a significant
portion of its range, and we determine
that the species is likely to become in
danger of extinction within the
foreseeable future throughout all of its
range. This is consistent with the courts’
holdings in Desert Survivors v.
Department of the Interior, No. 16–cv–
01165–JCS, 2018 WL 4053447 (N.D. Cal.
Aug. 24, 2018), and Center for Biological
Diversity v. Jewell, 248 F. Supp. 3d, 946,
959 (D. Ariz. 2017).
Determination of Status
Our review of the best available
scientific and commercial information
indicates that the June sucker does not
meet the definition of an endangered
species in accordance with sections 3(6)
and 4(a)(1) of the Act, but does meet the
definition of a threatened species in
accordance with sections 3(20) and
4(a)(1) of the Act. Therefore, we are
downlisting the June sucker in the List
of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
from endangered to threatened.
It is our policy, as published in the
Federal Register on July 1, 1994 (59 FR
34272), to identify to the maximum
extent practicable at the time a species
is classified, those activities that would
or would not constitute a violation of
section 9 of the Act. The intent of this
policy is to increase public awareness of
the effect of a listing on proposed and
ongoing activities within the range of
the species being listed. Because we are
listing this species as a threatened
species, the prohibitions in section 9
would not apply directly. We are
therefore putting into place below a set
of regulations to provide for the
conservation of the species in
accordance with section 4(d), which
also authorizes us to apply any of the
prohibitions in section 9 to a threatened
species. The 4(d) rule, which includes a
description of the kinds of activities that
would or would not constitute a
violation, complies with this policy.
Final Rule Issued Under Section 4(d) of
the Act
Background
Section 4(d) of the Act contains two
sentences. The first sentence states that
the ‘‘Secretary shall issue such
regulations as he deems necessary and
advisable to provide for the
conservation’’ of species listed as
threatened. The U.S. Supreme Court has
noted that statutory language like
‘‘necessary and advisable’’ demonstrates
a large degree of deference to the agency
(see Webster v. Doe, 486 U.S. 592
(1988)). Conservation is defined in the
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Act to mean ‘‘the use of all methods and
procedures which are necessary to bring
any endangered species or threatened
species to the point at which the
measures provided pursuant to [the Act]
are no longer necessary.’’ Additionally,
the second sentence of section 4(d) of
the Act states that the Secretary ‘‘may by
regulation prohibit with respect to any
threatened species any act prohibited
under section 9(a)(1), in the case of fish
or wildlife, or section 9(a)(2), in the case
of plants.’’ Thus, the combination of the
two sentences of section 4(d) provides
the Secretary with wide latitude of
discretion to select and promulgate
appropriate regulations tailored to the
specific conservation needs of the
threatened species. The second sentence
grants particularly broad discretion to
us when adopting the prohibitions
under section 9.
The courts have recognized the extent
of the Secretary’s discretion under this
standard to develop rules that are
appropriate for the conservation of a
species. For example, courts have
upheld rules developed under section
4(d) as a valid exercise of agency
authority where they prohibited take of
threatened wildlife, or include a limited
taking prohibition (see Alsea Valley
Alliance v. Lautenbacher, 2007 U.S.
Dist. Lexis 60203 (D. Or. 2007);
Washington Environmental Council v.
National Marine Fisheries Service, 2002
U.S. Dist. Lexis 5432 (W.D. Wash.
2002)). Courts have also upheld 4(d)
rules that do not address all of the
threats a species faces (see State of
Louisiana v. Verity, 853 F.2d 322 (5th
Cir. 1988)). As noted in the legislative
history when the Act was initially
enacted, ‘‘once an animal is on the
threatened list, the Secretary has an
almost infinite number of options
available to him with regard to the
permitted activities for those species. He
may, for example, permit taking, but not
importation of such species, or he may
choose to forbid both taking and
importation but allow the transportation
of such species’’ (H.R. Rep. No. 412,
93rd Cong., 1st Sess. 1973).
Exercising this authority under
section 4(d), we have developed a
species-specific 4(d) rule that is
designed to address the June sucker’s
specific threats and conservation needs.
Although the statute does not require us
to make a ‘‘necessary and advisable’’
finding with respect to the adoption of
specific prohibitions under section 9,
we find that this rule as a whole satisfies
the requirement in section 4(d) of the
Act to issue regulations deemed
necessary and advisable to provide for
the conservation of the June sucker. As
discussed under Summary of Factors
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Affecting the Species, we conclude that
the June sucker is no longer at risk of
extinction, but is still likely to become
so in the foreseeable future, primarily
due to the identified threats of water
development, habitat degradation, and
the introduction of nonnative species.
The provisions of this 4(d) rule promote
conservation of the June sucker by
encouraging management of the Utah
Lake system in ways that meet the
conservation needs of the June sucker
while taking into consideration the
stakeholders’ needs. The provisions in
this rule are some of many regulatory
tools that we will use to promote the
conservation of the June sucker.
Provisions of the 4(d) Rule
This 4(d) rule provides for the
conservation of the June sucker by
prohibiting the following activities, with
certain exceptions (discussed below):
Importing or exporting; possession and
other acts with unlawfully taken
specimens; delivering, receiving,
transporting, or shipping in interstate or
foreign commerce in the course of
commercial activity; and selling or
offering for sale in interstate or foreign
commerce. In addition, anyone taking,
attempting to take, or otherwise
possessing a June sucker, or parts
thereof, in violation of section 9 of the
Act will be subject to a penalty under
section 11 of the Act, with certain
exceptions (discussed below). Under
section 7 of the Act, Federal agencies
must continue to ensure that any actions
they authorize, fund, or carry out are not
likely to jeopardize the continued
existence of the June sucker.
Under the Act, ‘‘take’’ means to
harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot,
wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect, or
to attempt to engage in any such
conduct. Some of these provisions have
been further defined in regulations at 50
CFR 17.3. Take can result knowingly or
otherwise, by direct and indirect
impacts, intentionally or incidentally.
Allowing incidental and intentional
take in certain cases, such as for the
purposes of scientific inquiry,
monitoring, or to improve habitat or
water availability and quality, would
help preserve a species’ remaining
populations, slow their rate of decline,
and decrease synergistic, negative
effects from other stressors.
We may issue permits to carry out
otherwise prohibited activities,
including those described above,
involving threatened wildlife under
certain circumstances. Regulations
governing permits are codified at 50
CFR 17.32. With regard to threatened
wildlife, a permit may be issued for the
following purposes: For scientific
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purposes, to enhance propagation or
survival, for economic hardship, for
zoological exhibition, for educational
purposes, for incidental taking, or for
special purposes consistent with the
purposes of the Act. There are also
certain statutory exemptions from the
prohibitions, which are found in
sections 9 and 10 of the Act.
We recognize the special and unique
relationship with our State natural
resource agency partners in contributing
to conservation of listed species. State
agencies often possess scientific data
and valuable expertise on the status and
distribution of endangered, threatened,
and candidate species of wildlife and
plants. State agencies, because of their
authorities and their close working
relationships with local governments
and landowners, are in a unique
position to assist us in implementing all
aspects of the Act. In this regard, section
6 of the Act provides that we shall
cooperate to the maximum extent
practicable with the States in carrying
out programs authorized by the Act.
Therefore, any qualified employee or
agent of a State conservation agency that
is a party to a cooperative agreement
with us in accordance with section 6(c)
of the Act, who is designated by his or
her agency for such purposes, will be
able to conduct activities designed to
conserve the June sucker that may result
in otherwise prohibited take without
additional authorization.
As discussed above under Summary
of Factors Affecting the Species,
nonnative species, water development,
and habitat degradation affect the status
of the June sucker. A range of
conservation activities, therefore, have
the potential to benefit the June sucker,
including nonnative fish removal,
habitat restoration projects, monitoring
of June sucker, management of
recreational fisheries, June sucker
research projects, educational and
outreach efforts, and maintenance of
June sucker refuges and stocking
programs. Accordingly, this 4(d) rule
addresses activities to facilitate
conservation and management of the
June sucker where they currently occur
and may occur in the future by
excepting them from the Act’s take
prohibition under certain specific
conditions. These activities are intended
to increase management flexibility and
encourage support for the conservation
and habitat improvement of the June
sucker. Under this 4(d) rule, take will
continue to be prohibited, except for
actions allowed in this 4(d) rule,
provided the actions are approved by
the Service, in coordination with any
existing designated recovery program
(e.g., JSRIP), for the purpose of June
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sucker conservation or recovery.
Approval must be in writing (by letter
or email) from a Service biologist or
supervisor with authority over June
sucker decisions. Take is allowed under
this 4(d) rule as follows, and is further
described below:
• Incidental take resulting from
activities intended to reduce or
eliminate nonnative fish, including, but
not limited to, common carp, northern
pike, and white bass, from Utah Lake or
its tributaries.
• Incidental take resulting from
habitat restoration projects or projects
that allow for the increase of instream
flows in Utah Lake tributaries, such as
diversion removals.
• Incidental take resulting from
monitoring of June sucker in Utah Lake
and its tributaries.
• Incidental take resulting from
monitoring and management of
recreational sportfish populations in
Utah Lake and its tributaries.
• Incidental and direct take resulting
from research projects to study factors
affecting June sucker or its habitat for
the purposes of providing management
recommendations or improved
condition of June sucker.
• Incidental and direct take resulting
from educational or outreach efforts to
increase public awareness, engagement,
and support for June sucker recovery
efforts.
• Incidental and direct take resulting
from maintaining June sucker refuges
and stocking population, and from
moving June sucker for the purposes of
stocking them in Utah Lake.
These forms of allowable take are
explained in more detail below. For all
forms of allowable take, reasonable care
must be practiced to minimize the
impacts from the actions. Reasonable
care means limiting the impacts to June
sucker individuals and populations by
complying with all applicable Federal,
State, and Tribal regulations for the
activity in question; using methods and
techniques that result in the least harm,
injury, or death, as feasible; undertaking
activities at the least impactful times
(e.g., conducting activities that might
impact spawning habitat in a tributary
only after spawning is concluded for the
year) and locations, as feasible;
procuring and implementing technical
assistance from a qualified biologist on
projects regarding all methods prior to
the implementation of those methods;
ensuring the number of individuals
removed or sampled minimally impacts
the existing wild population; ensuring
no disease or parasites are introduced
into the existing June sucker population;
and preserving the genetic diversity of
wild populations.
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Nonnative Fish Removal
Incidental take is allowed where it
results from activities intended to
reduce or eliminate nonnative fish,
including, but not limited to, common
carp, northern pike, and white bass,
from Utah Lake or its tributaries.
Control of nonnative fish is vital for the
continued recovery of June sucker.
Control of nonnative fish is primarily
conducted with mechanical removal via
commercial seine netting and, to a
limited extent, through angling (for
northern pike). Other methods,
including the use of genetically
modified nonnative fish and
electrofishing to reduce existing
populations, may be implemented in the
future.
This 4(d) rule defines nonnative fish
removal as any action with the primary
or secondary purpose (such as the
introduction of genetically engineered
nonnative fish as part of an elimination
strategy) of removing nonnative fish
from Utah Lake and its tributaries that
compete with, predate upon, or degrade
the habitat of the June sucker. These
removal methods must be approved by
the Service in writing (by letter or
email), in coordination with an existing
designated recovery program (e.g.,
JSRIP) for that purpose. Such methods
may include, but are not limited to,
mechanical removal, chemical
treatments such as piscicides, or
biological controls. All methods used
must be in compliance with State and
Federal regulations. Whenever possible,
June suckers that are caught alive as part
of nonnative fish removal should be
returned to their source as quickly as
possible.
Habitat Restoration and Improvement of
Instream Flows
Incidental take resulting from habitat
restoration projects or projects that
increase instream flows in Utah Lake
tributaries is allowed under this 4(d)
rule. Habitat restoration projects are
needed to provide additional spawning
and rearing habitat and refugia for June
sucker. Improvements in the ability to
obtain and deliver water to any of the
known spawning tributaries will allow
for improved spawning conditions,
entrainment of June sucker larvae for
development, and periodic high flows
providing scouring of spawning
habitats. This 4(d) rule defines habitat
restoration or water delivery
improvement projects as any action
with the primary or secondary purpose
of improving habitat conditions in Utah
Lake and its tributaries or improving
water delivery and available instream
flows in spawning tributaries. These
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209
projects must be approved by the
Service in writing, in coordination with
any existing designated recovery
program, for that purpose. Examples of
planned or suggested projects where
incidental take is allowed to occur
include the Provo River Delta
Restoration Project and the removal of
water diversion structures from the
Provo River and Hobble Creek.
June Sucker Monitoring
This 4(d) rule allows incidental take
associated with any method used to
detect June suckers in the wild for the
purposes of better understanding
population numbers, trends, or response
to stressors that is not intended to be
destructive, but that may
unintentionally cause harm or death.
Monitoring of June suckers is vital to
understanding the population
dynamics, health, and trends; for
measuring the success of the stocking
program; for evaluating impacts from
threats; and for evaluating recovery
actions that address threats to the
species. With the use of PIT tag
technology, monitoring is becoming less
disruptive to the June sucker. However,
many monitoring methods, including
the initial PIT tagging of individuals,
may accidentally harm fish or result in
death. In addition to PIT tag readers,
methods that may be used to detect June
suckers in the wild include trammel
netting, spotlighting, minnow trapping,
trap netting, gill-netting, electrofishing,
and seining. Any monitoring activities
not conducted by the State or under the
State’s section 6 permit must be
approved by the Service in writing and
be conducted in coordination with any
existing designated recovery program.
Recreational Fisheries Management
Recreational fisheries monitoring
actions conducted by the State are
allowed to cause incidental take of June
suckers through this 4(d) rule, provided
that, whenever possible, June suckers
that are caught alive as part of
recreational fisheries are returned to
their source as quickly as possible.
These activities do not include fishing
or other recreational activities
conducted by private individuals but
only those conducted by the State to
manage fisheries in Utah Lake. Covered
activities are those that do not occur in
June sucker spawning habitat during the
season of use or rearing habitat at any
time of year, and are designed to count
or capture recreational sport fish only.
According to the interagency ‘‘Policy for
Conserving Species Listed or Proposed
for Listing Under the Endangered
Species Act While Providing and
Enhancing Recreational Fisheries
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Opportunities’’ published in the Federal
Register on June 3, 1996 (61 FR 27978),
the Service will support management
practices that are consistent with
recovery objectives and compatible with
existing recreational fisheries.
Management of recreational fishing
opportunities undertaken by the State,
or its designated agent, on Utah Lake
and its tributaries require regular
monitoring of sport fish populations.
Methods that may be used to monitor
sport fish populations include trammel
netting, spotlighting, trawling, minnow
trapping, trap netting, gill-netting,
electrofishing, and seining. Use of these
methods may inadvertently result in the
capture, and incidental take, of
individual June Sucker. Any activities
associated with recreational fisheries
management that are likely to
significantly or repeatedly impact June
suckers, such as those in spawning
habitat during the season of use, those
in the rearing habitat any time of year,
or those that use methods not targeted
to count or capture recreational sport
fish only, must be approved by the
Service in writing (by letter or email)
and conducted in coordination with any
existing recovery program in order to
minimize effects on the population.
Research
This 4(d) rule defines June sucker
research allowed to cause take as any
activity undertaken for the purposes of
increasing our understanding of June
sucker biology, ecology, or recovery
needs under the auspices of UDWR, a
recognized academic institution, or a
qualified scientific contractor and
approved by the Service in writing, in
coordination with any existing
designated recovery program, as a
necessary and productive study for June
sucker recovery. Additional research is
needed on June sucker biology, ecology,
habitat needs, predators, and response
to threats in order to improve the
species’ status and provide
recommendations for population
management, habitat improvement, and
threat reduction. Research may involve
capture of June suckers using methods
described above, or a variety of other
activities to study water quality,
nonnative fishes, lake and riverine
ecosystems, tributary flows, habitat, or
other factors affecting June suckers that
may impact individual fish
inadvertently. In some cases, lethal
sampling of June suckers for research
purposes may be necessary and
appropriate.
Education and Outreach
This 4(d) rule defines June sucker
educational and outreach actions
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allowed to cause take as any activity
undertaken for the purposes of
increasing public awareness of June
sucker biology, ecology, or recovery
needs and their positive effects on Utah
Lake and its tributaries (e.g., a June
sucker rearing-and-release program for
high school students or a live June
sucker display at an outreach event).
These activities must be approved by
the Service in writing (by letter or
email), in coordination with any
existing designated recovery program
(e.g., JSRIP), as activities likely to
benefit June sucker conservation
through increased public awareness and
engagement, which support June sucker
recovery.
Education and outreach are a vital
part of June sucker recovery progress.
Public awareness of June sucker biology
and ecology helps foster support for the
recovery program’s activities in and
around Utah Lake. Increasing the
prevailing understanding of how
recovery activities for June suckers
improve the health, function, beauty,
and quality of Utah Lake for sport
fishers, recreationists, and the
surrounding community will strengthen
support for continued conservation of
the fish. It will also serve to counteract
common and incorrect narratives that
the protection of the June sucker is
responsible for preventing positive
activities and development in and
around Utah Lake. This is particularly
important during the upcoming PRDRP
construction, in order to tie the recovery
of the fish to meaningful improvements
in ecological conditions and amenities
for the public at Utah Lake.
Refuges and Stocking
This 4(d) rule defines June sucker
stocking and refuge maintenance as any
activity undertaken for the long-term
maintenance of the June sucker at
facilities outside of Utah Lake and its
tributaries or for the production of June
suckers for stocking in Utah Lake. Take
could occur from necessary facility
maintenance or water management,
including at Red Butte Reservoir and its
downstream drainages. Any breeding,
stocking, or refuge program must be
approved by the Service in writing, in
coordination with any existing
designated recovery program. Any June
sucker breeding program shall be in
compliance with all applicable
regulations and best hatchery and
fishery management practices as
described in the American Fisheries
Society’s Fish Hatchery Management
(Wedemeyer 2002).
Maintaining refuge populations and
stocking the June sucker in Utah Lake is
an integral part of June sucker recovery.
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The process of breeding, rearing,
growing, maintaining, and stocking June
suckers may result in take at all life
stages, but the benefits to the species far
outweigh any losses. At the present
time, one facility (FES hatchery) breeds
the June sucker for stocking in Utah
Lake; this facility also functions as the
designated refuge population for June
sucker. In addition to the hatchery, FES
uses offsite ponds as a grow-out facility
to allow fish to reach a larger size before
they are stocked in Utah Lake because
this significantly increases survival
upon release (Burgad et al. 2016, p. 8).
Another population of June suckers
exists in Red Butte Reservoir and is
maintained, but not actively managed as
a refuge, for stocking purposes. Red
Butte Reservoir is a useful source
population and may be used for
stocking more intensively in the future,
since fish from Red Butte Reservoir
consistently have the highest poststocking success rates.
Nothing in this 4(d) rule changes in
any way the recovery planning
provisions of section 4(f) of the Act, the
consultation requirements under section
7 of the Act, or our ability to enter into
partnerships for the management and
protection of the June sucker. However,
interagency cooperation may be further
streamlined through planned
programmatic consultations for the
species between us and other Federal
agencies, where appropriate.
Required Determinations
National Environmental Policy Act (42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.)
We have determined that
environmental assessments and EISs, as
defined under the authority of the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), need not
be prepared in connection with
determining a species’ listing status
under the Endangered Species Act. In
an October 25, 1983, notice in the
Federal Register (48 FR 49244), we
outlined our reasons for this
determination, which included a
compelling recommendation from the
Council on Environmental Quality that
we cease preparing environmental
assessments or environmental impact
statements for listing decisions.
Government-to-Government
Relationship With Tribes
In accordance with the President’s
memorandum of April 29, 1994,
(Government-to-Government Relations
with Native American Tribal
Governments; 59 FR 22951), Executive
Order 13175 (Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal
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Governments), and the Department of
the Interior’s manual at 512 DM 2, we
readily acknowledge our responsibility
to communicate meaningfully with
recognized Federal Tribes on a
government-to-government basis. In
accordance with Secretarial Order 3206
of June 5, 1997 (American Indian Tribal
Rights, Federal-Tribal Trust
Responsibilities, and the Endangered
Species Act), we readily acknowledge
our responsibilities to work directly
with Tribes in developing programs for
healthy ecosystems, to acknowledge that
tribal lands are not subject to the same
controls as Federal public lands, to
remain sensitive to Indian culture, and
to make information available to Tribes.
We have determined that no Tribes will
be affected by this rule because there are
no Tribal lands or interests within or
adjacent to June sucker habitat.
Common name
*
References Cited
Regulation Promulgation
A complete list of all references cited
in this final rule is available at https://
www.regulations.gov at Docket No.
FWS–R6–ES–2019–0026, or upon
request from the Utah Ecological
Services Field Office (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT).
Accordingly, we hereby amend part
17, subchapter B of chapter I, title 50 of
the Code of Federal Regulations, as
follows:
1. The authority citation for part 17
continues to read as follows:
■
Authors
The primary authors of this final rule
are staff members of the Service’s
Regions 5 and 7 and the Utah Ecological
Services Field Office (see ADDRESSES
and FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 17
Endangered and threatened species,
Exports, Imports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements,
Transportation.
Scientific name
*
PART 17—ENDANGERED AND
THREATENED WILDLIFE AND PLANTS
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1361–1407; 1531–
1544; and 4201–4245, unless otherwise
noted.
2. Amend § 17.11(h) by revising the
entry for ‘‘Sucker, June (Chasmistes
liorus)’’ under ‘‘FISHES’’ in the List of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife to
read as follows:
■
§ 17.11 Endangered and threatened
wildlife.
*
*
*
(h) * * *
Where listed
*
*
Status
*
*
*
Listing citations and applicable
rules
*
*
FISHES
*
*
Sucker, June .............................
*
*
Chasmistes liorus .....................
*
*
3. Amend § 17.44 by adding paragraph
(cc) to read as follows:
■
§ 17.44
Special rules—fishes.
*
*
*
*
*
(cc) June sucker (Chasmistes liorus).
(1) Prohibitions. The following
prohibitions that apply to endangered
wildlife also apply to the June sucker.
Except as provided under paragraph
(cc)(2) of this section and §§ 17.4 and
17.5, it is unlawful for any person
subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States to commit, to attempt to commit,
to solicit another to commit, or cause to
be committed, any of the following acts
in regard to this species:
(i) Import or export, as set forth at
§ 17.21(b) for endangered wildlife.
(ii) Take, as set forth at § 17.21(c)(1)
for endangered wildlife.
(iii) Possession and other acts with
unlawfully taken specimens, as set forth
at § 17.21(d)(1) for endangered wildlife.
(iv) Interstate or foreign commerce in
the course of commercial activity, as set
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*
*
Wherever found ........................
*
*
forth at § 17.21(e) for endangered
wildlife.
(v) Sale or offer for sale, as set forth
at § 17.21(f) for endangered wildlife.
(2) Exceptions from prohibitions. In
regard to this species, you may:
(i) Conduct activities as authorized by
an existing permit under § 17.32.
(ii) Conduct activities as authorized
by a permit issued prior to February 3,
2021 under § 17.22 for the duration of
the permit.
(iii) Take, as set forth at § 17.21(c)(2)
through (c)(4) for endangered wildlife.
(iv) Take, as set forth at § 17.31(b).
(v) Take June suckers while carrying
out the following legally conducted
activities in accordance with this
paragraph (cc)(2)(iv):
(A) Definitions. For the purposes of
this paragraph (cc)(2)(iv):
(1) Qualified biologist means a fulltime fish biologist or aquatic resources
manager employed by Utah Division of
Wildlife Resources, a Department of the
Interior agency, or fish biologist or
aquatic resource manager employed by
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4701
*
*
51 FR 10851, 3/31/1986; 85
FR [insert Federal Register
page where the document
begins], 1/4/2021; 50 CFR
17.44(cc) 4d; 50 CFR
17.95(e).CH
T
Sfmt 4700
*
*
a private consulting firm that has been
approved by the Service in writing (by
letter or email), the designated recovery
program (e.g., June Sucker Recovery
Implementation Program), or the Utah
Division of Wildlife Resources.
(2) Reasonable care means limiting
the impacts to June sucker individuals
and populations by complying with all
applicable Federal, State, and Tribal
regulations for the activity in question;
using methods and techniques that
result in the least harm, injury, or death,
as feasible; undertaking activities at the
least impactful times and locations, as
feasible; procuring and implementing
technical assistance from a qualified
biologist on projects regarding all
methods prior to the implementation of
those methods; ensuring the number of
individuals removed or sampled
minimally impacts the existing wild
population; ensuring no disease or
parasites are introduced into the
existing June sucker population; and
E:\FR\FM\04JAR2.SGM
04JAR2
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 1 / Monday, January 4, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
preserving the genetic diversity of wild
populations.
(B) Allowable forms of take of June
suckers. Take of June suckers as a result
of the following legally conducted
activities is allowed, provided that the
activity is approved by the Service in
writing (by letter or email), in
coordination with any existing
designated recovery program, for the
purpose of the conservation or recovery
of the June sucker, and that reasonable
care is practiced to minimize the impact
of such activities.
(1) Nonnative fish removal. Take of
June suckers as a result of any action
with the primary or secondary purpose
of removing from Utah Lake and its
tributaries nonnative fish that compete
with, predate upon, or degrade the
habitat of the June sucker is allowed.
Allowable methods of removal may
include, but are not limited to,
mechanical removal, chemical
treatments, or biological controls.
Whenever possible, June suckers that
are caught alive as part of nonnative fish
removal should be returned to their
source as quickly as possible.
(2) Habitat restoration and
improvement of instream flows. Take of
June suckers as a result of any action
with the primary or secondary purpose
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:06 Dec 31, 2020
Jkt 253001
of improving habitat conditions in Utah
Lake and its tributaries or improving
water delivery and available in-stream
flows in spawning tributaries is
allowed.
(3) Monitoring. Take of June suckers
as a result of any method that is used
to detect June suckers in the wild to
better understand population numbers,
trends, or response to stressors, and that
is not intended to be destructive but that
may unintentionally cause harm or
death, is allowed.
(4) Recreational fisheries
management. Take of June suckers as a
result of any activity by the State, or its
designated agent, that is necessary to
manage or monitor recreational fisheries
in Utah Lake and its tributaries is
allowed, provided the management
practices do not contradict June sucker
recovery objectives and that the
activities are not intended to cause harm
or death to June suckers.
(5) Research. Take of June suckers as
a result of any activity undertaken for
the purposes of increasing scientific
understanding of June sucker biology,
ecology, or recovery needs under the
auspices of the designated recovery
program, a recognized academic
institution, or a qualified scientific
contractor is allowed. Incidental and
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
direct take resulting from such approved
research to benefit the June sucker is
allowed.
(6) Education and outreach. Take of
June suckers as a result of any activity
undertaken under the auspices of the
designated recovery program for the
purposes of increasing public awareness
of June sucker biology, ecology, or
recovery needs and June sucker
recovery benefits for Utah Lake, its
tributaries, and the surrounding
communities is allowed. Incidental and
direct take resulting from such
educational or outreach efforts to benefit
the June sucker is allowed.
(7) Refuges and stocking. Take of June
suckers as a result of activities
undertaken for the long-term
maintenance of June suckers at Serviceapproved facilities outside of Utah Lake
and its tributaries or for the production
of June suckers for stocking in Utah
Lake is allowed.
(vi) Possess and engage in other acts
with unlawfully taken endangered
wildlife, as set forth at § 17.21(d)(2).
Aurelia Skipwith
Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2020–27833 Filed 12–31–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4333–15–P
E:\FR\FM\04JAR2.SGM
04JAR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 1 (Monday, January 4, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 192-212]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-27833]
[[Page 191]]
Vol. 86
Monday,
No. 1
January 4, 2021
Part II
Department of the Interior
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Fish and Wildlife Service
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50 CFR Part 17
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Reclassification of the
Endangered June Sucker to Threatened With a Section 4(d) Rule; Final
Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 1 / Monday, January 4, 2021 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 192]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS-R6-ES-2019-0026; FXES11130900000-201-FF09E22000]
RIN 1018-BD48
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Reclassification
of the Endangered June Sucker to Threatened With a Section 4(d) Rule
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), are
reclassifying the June sucker (Chasmistes liorus) from endangered to
threatened under the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act),
due to substantial improvements in the species' overall status since
its original listing as endangered in 1986. This action is based on a
thorough review of the best scientific and commercial data available,
which indicates that the June sucker no longer meets the definition of
an endangered species under the Act. The June sucker will remain
protected as a threatened species under the Act. We are also finalizing
a rule under section 4(d) of the Act that provides for the conservation
of the June sucker.
DATES: This rule is effective February 3, 2021.
ADDRESSES: This final rule, supporting documents we used in preparing
this rule, and public comments we received are available on the
internet at https://www.regulations.gov at Docket No. FWS-R6-ES-2019-
0026. Persons who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD)
may call the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Yvette Converse, Field Supervisor,
telephone: 801-975-3330. Direct all questions or requests for
additional information to: JUNE SUCKER QUESTIONS, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Utah Ecological Services Field Office, 2369 Orton
Circle, Suite 50, West Valley City, UT 84119. Persons who use a TDD may
call the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary
Why we need to publish a rule. Under the Act, if a species is
determined to no longer be an endangered or threatened species, we may
reclassify the species or remove it from the Federal Lists of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants due to recovery. A
species is an ``endangered species'' for purposes of the Act if it is
in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its
range and is a ``threatened species'' if it is likely to become an
endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a
significant portion of its range. The Act does not define the term
``foreseeable future.'' However, we consider ``foreseeable future'' as
that period of time within which a reasonable prediction can be relied
upon in making a determination about the future conservation status of
a species. We are reclassifying June sucker from endangered to
threatened (i.e., ``downlisting'') because we have determined that the
species is no longer in danger of extinction throughout all or a
significant portion of its range. Downlisting a species can only be
completed by issuing a rule.
The basis for our action. Under the Act, we can determine that a
species is an endangered or threatened species based on any one or more
of the following five factors or the cumulative effects thereof: (A)
The present or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of
its habitat or range; (B) overutilization for commercial, recreational,
scientific, or educational purposes; (C) disease or predation; (D) the
inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; or (E) other natural or
manmade factors affecting its continued existence. Based on an
assessment of the best available information regarding the status of
and threats to June sucker, we have determined that the species no
longer meets the definition of endangered under the Act, but does meet
the definition of threatened. The 4(d) rule provides exceptions to take
prohibitions for activities that will further recovery of the species.
This final rule recognizes that based on the best available
science, June sucker no longer meets the definition of an endangered
species, but will remain protected as a threatened species under the
Act. This progress towards recovery is a result of conservation efforts
implemented by stakeholders. Collaborative conservation efforts have
reduced the intensity of threats to the species and improved its
population numbers. The 4(d) rule will accommodate recovery activities
such as non-native control efforts, habitat restoration, monitoring,
research, stocking, and refuge maintenance.
Previous Federal Actions
On March 31, 1986, we published in the Federal Register (51 FR
10851) the final rule listing June sucker as an endangered species and
designating critical habitat comprising the lower 4.9 miles (mi) (7.8
kilometers (km)) of the Provo River in Utah County, Utah.
On November 13, 2001, we published in the Federal Register (66 FR
56840) a notice formally declaring our intention to participate in the
multi-agency June Sucker Recovery Implementation Program (JSRIP) in
partnership with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (USBR), Utah
Reclamation Mitigation and Conservation Commission (URMCC), the
Department of the Interior (DOI), State of Utah Department of Natural
Resources (UDNR), the Central Utah Water Conservancy District (CUWCD),
Provo River Water Users Association, Provo Reservoir Water Users
Company, and outdoor interest groups. The JSRIP was designed to
implement recovery actions for the June sucker and facilitate
resolution of conflicts associated with June sucker recovery in the
Utah Lake and Provo River basins in Utah. We have participated in the
JSRIP since this time and remain an active program member.
On November 26, 2019, we published in the Federal Register (84 FR
65080) a proposed rule to reclassify June sucker from ``endangered'' to
``threatened'' (i.e., to ``downlist'' the species) on the List of
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife (List). Please refer to that
proposed rule for a detailed description of the Federal actions
concerning this species that occurred prior to November 26, 2019.
Species Information
It is our intent to discuss only those topics directly related to
downlisting June sucker in this rule. The citations represent only the
sources required to support this action or to provide context for it,
and are not the sum total of all literature pertaining to the species.
For more information on the description, biology, ecology, and habitat
of the species, please refer to the final listing rule published in the
Federal Register on March 31, 1986 (51 FR 10851), and the species'
recovery plan (Service 1999), as well as the materials cited in this
rule. These documents will be available as supporting materials on
https://www.regulations.gov under Docket No. FWS-R6-ES-2019-0026.
In our analysis, we identify the species' ecological requirements
for survival and reproduction using the concepts of resiliency,
redundancy, and representation (the 3Rs). Resiliency is the ability of
a species to withstand environmental and demographic stochastic events
(the natural range of favorable and unfavorable conditions). It is
associated with population size, growth rate, and habitat quality.
Redundancy is the ability of a species to
[[Page 193]]
withstand catastrophic events for which adaptation is unlikely. It is
associated with the number, distribution, and resilience of individual
populations throughout the current range of the species. Representation
is the ability of a species to adapt to novel changes in its
environment, as measured by its ecological and genetic diversity and
its ability to disperse and colonize new areas.
Taxonomy and Description
The June sucker, a unique lake sucker named for the month in which
it spawns, was first collected and described by David S. Jordan in
1878, in Utah Lake, Utah County, Utah (Jordan 1878, entire). However,
taxonomic questions regarding hybridization of the June sucker and co-
occurring Utah sucker (Catostomus ardens) ultimately resulted in
reclassification of the species as described below.
The two species likely evolved together in Utah Lake. During the
1930s, a severe drought stressed the sucker populations in Utah Lake,
increasing the incidence of June and Utah sucker hybridization (Miller
and Smith 1981, p. 7). After this hybridization event, as sucker
populations increased in abundance, the new genes that occurred in both
the June sucker and Utah sucker populations resulted in hybrid
characteristics within both populations (Evans 1997, p. 8). It is
likely that the two species may have hybridized at multiple points in
the past, in response to environmental bottlenecks (Evans 1997, pp. 9-
12). As a result of the hybridization event in the 1930s, two
subspecies of June sucker were originally identified--Chasmistes liorus
liorus for sucker specimens collected in Utah Lake in the late 1800s,
and Chasmistes liorus mictus for specimens collected after 1939,
following the drought years (Miller and Smith 1981, p. 11). This
classification was never corroborated, and because the June sucker
maintained its distinctiveness from other lake suckers despite
hybridization, we determined that it should be listed as a distinct
species under the name Chasmistes liorus (51 FR 10851; March 31, 1986).
The June sucker has a large, robust body; a wide, rounded head; and
a hump on the snout (Scoppettone and Vinyard 1991, p. 1). Adults are
17-24 inches (in) (43.2-61.0 centimeters (cm)) in length (Scoppettone
and Vinyard 1991, p. 1; Belk 1998, p. 2). Lake suckers are mid-water
planktivores (plankton feeders). The June sucker is a long-lived
species, living to 40 years or more (Scoppettone and Vinyard 1991, p.
3; Belk 1998, p. 6). In the wild, June suckers reach reproductive
maturity at 5-10 years of age. They exhibit rapid growth for the first
3-5 years, with intermediate growth rates between ages 8-10, and a
further reduced growth rate after age 10. Growth between sexes does not
differ within the first 10 years (Scoppettone and Vinyard 1991, p. 9).
Distribution and Habitat
The June sucker is native and endemic to Utah Lake and its
tributaries, which are the primary spawning habitat for the species.
The June sucker is not found outside of its native range except in two
populations established for conservation purposes. A refuge population
was created as part of the JSRIP stocking program to enhance and secure
the species' population in Utah Lake at the Fisheries Experiment
Station (FES) hatchery in Logan, Utah (Service 2015, entire). An
additional population was established in Red Butte Reservoir, Salt Lake
County, Utah, in 2004 and is now self-sustaining (Utah Division of
Wildlife Resources (UDWR) 2010, pp. 4-5). These additional populations
have aided in retaining ecologic and genetic diversity in June sucker,
which in turn aids the species in adapting to changing environmental
conditions (i.e., increases representation) (JSRIP 2018, pp. 2-3).
Utah Lake is a remnant of ancient Lake Bonneville, and is one of
the largest natural freshwater lakes in the western United States. It
covers an area of approximately 150 square miles (mi\2\) (400 square
kilometers (km\2\)) and is relatively shallow, averaging 9 feet (ft)
(2.7 meters (m)) in depth (Brimhall and Merritt 1981, pp. 2-3). The
lake lies west of Provo, Utah, and is the terminus for several rivers
and creeks, including the Provo, Spanish Fork, and American Fork
Rivers, and Hobble and Battle Creeks. The outflow of Utah Lake is the
Jordan River, which flows north into the Great Salt Lake, a terminal
basin.
Utah Lake is located in a sedimentary drainage basin dominated by
erosive soils with high salt concentrations. Utah Lake had a sediment
filling rate of about 0.03 in (1 millimeter (mm)) per year over the
past 10,000 years; this rate more than doubled with the urbanization of
Utah Valley (Brimhall and Merritt 1981, pp. 3-5). Faults under the lake
appear to be lowering the lake bed at about the same rate as sediment
is filling it (Brimhall and Merritt 1981, pp. 10-11). Inputs of
nutrient-rich sediments combined with the lake's high evaporation rate
cause high levels of sediment loading, high soluble salt
concentrations, and high nutrient levels as a baseline condition
(Brimhall and Merritt 1981, p. 11).
Shallow lakes, such as Utah Lake, are typically characterized as
having one of two ecological states: A clear water state or a turbid
water state (Scheffer 1998, p. 10). The clear water state is often
dominated by rooted aquatic macrophytes (aquatic plants) that can
greatly reduce turbidity by securing bottom sediments (Carpenter and
Lodge 1986, p. 4; Madsen et al. 2001, p. 6) and preventing excessive
phytoplankton (algae) production through a suite of mechanisms (Timms
and Moss 1984, pp. 3-5). Alternatively, a shallow lake in a turbid
water state contains little or no aquatic vegetation to secure bottom
sediments (Madsen et al. 2001, p. 9). As a result, fish movement and
wave action can easily suspend lake-bottom sediments (Madsen et al.
2001, p. 9). In addition, fish can promote algal production by
recycling nutrients (both through feeding activity and excretion). Fish
can also suppress zooplankton densities through predation, and the
zooplankton would otherwise suppress algal abundance (Timms and Moss
1984, p. 11; Brett and Goldman 1996, p. 3).
Historically, Utah Lake existed in a clear water state dominated by
rooted aquatic vegetation, as shown in sediment cores extracted from
Utah Lake (Macharia and Power 2011, p. 3). Sediment cores reveal a
shift in the state of the lake shortly after European settlement of
Utah Valley to an algae-dominated, turbid condition, lacking
macrophytic vegetation that serves as refugial habitat for June sucker
(Brimhill and Merritt 1981, p. 16; Scheffer 1998, p. 6; Hickman and
Thurin 2007, p. 8; Macharia and Power 2011, p. 5). This shift is
believed to be a result of excessive nutrient input, management-induced
fluctuations in lake levels, and the introduction of common carp
(Cyprinus carpio). The result of compounded natural and human-caused
effects is a present-day lake ecosystem that is dominated by algae,
rather than the clear water state in which June sucker evolved.
The extent of ideal riverine habitat available for spawning adults
and developing larval June sucker was more abundant historically than
it is currently. Prior to settlement of Utah Valley, spawning
tributaries, such as the Provo, Spanish Fork, and American Fork Rivers,
and Hobble Creek, contained large deltas with braided, slow, meandering
channels and aquatic vegetation that provided suitable spawning and
larval rearing habitat (Olsen et al. 2002, p. 4). Multiple spawning
tributaries provided redundancy for June sucker. The range of diverse
habitats historically present
[[Page 194]]
within these tributaries was essential to larval sucker survival and
maintaining the species' resiliency. Most importantly, slow water pool
and marsh habitats provided refuge from predation by larger fishes.
Since European colonization of Utah Valley, changes to the
tributaries have decreased the available habitat for June sucker
spawning and rearing, although recent restoration projects have
improved conditions in the Provo River and Hobble Creek. The Provo
River contains many natural characteristics that support the majority
of the June sucker spawning run and also play an important role in
contributing to the recovery of the species. The Provo River is the
largest tributary to the lake in terms of annual flow, width, and
watershed area (Stamp et al. 2002, p. 19). All of these characteristics
contribute to higher numbers of spawning June suckers using the Provo
River than the other Utah Lake tributaries. These characteristics also
best support the proper timing of the June sucker's spawning period and
help protect against further hybridization with Utah sucker. Continued
increase and improvement of available larval rearing habitat in the
Provo River is necessary for recovery of the species.
Biology and Ecology
June suckers are highly mobile and can cover large portions of
their range in a short period of time (Radant and Sakaguchi 1981, p. 7;
Buelow 2006, p. 4; Landom et al. 2006, p. 13). Adult June suckers
exhibit lake-wide distributional behavior throughout most of the year
(Buelow 2006). However, in the fall, June suckers congregate along the
western lakeshore, and in the winter, move to the eastern areas. One
explanation for the easterly orientation in the winter may be the
presence of relatively warm fresh-water springs along the eastern shore
of Utah Lake (SWCA 2002, p. 14).
During pre-spawn staging, in April and May, June suckers congregate
in large numbers near the mouths of the Provo River, Hobble Creek,
Spanish Fork River, and American Fork River (Radant and Hickman 1984,
p. 3; Buelow et al. 2006, p. 4; Hines 2011, p. 8). June suckers
generally initiate a spawning migration into Utah Lake tributaries
(primarily the Provo River, but also Hobble Creek and, to a lesser
extent, Spanish Fork River and American Fork River) during the second
and third weeks of May (Radant and Hickman 1984, p. 7). Provo Bay is
likely one of their primary pre-spawn and post-spawn congregation areas
(Buelow 2006, p. 4).
Most spawning is completed within 5-8 days. Post-spawning suckers
congregate near the mouth of Provo Bay, which could be a response to
the high food productivity that remains in the bay until the fall
(Radant and Shirley 1987, p. 13; Buelow 2006, p. 8). Zooplankton
densities are greater in Provo Bay than in other lake areas (Kreitzer
et al. 2011, p. 9), providing abundant food to meet the energy demands
of post-spawn suckers, as well as an ideal location for the growth and
survival of young-of-year June suckers recently emerged from the
spawning tributaries (Kreitzer et al. 2011, p. 10).
June sucker spawning habitat consists of moderately deep runs and
riffles in slow to moderate current with a substrate composed of 4-8 in
(100-200 mm) coarse gravel or small cobble that is free of silt and
algae. Deeper pools adjacent to spawning areas may provide important
resting or staging areas (Stamp et al. 2002, p. 5).
Under natural conditions, June sucker larvae drift downstream and
rear in shallow vegetated habitats near tributary mouths in Utah Lake
(Modde and Muirhead 1990, pp. 7-8; Crowl and Thomas 1997, p. 11;
Keleher et al. 1998, p. 47). Juvenile June suckers then migrate into
Utah Lake and use littoral aquatic vegetation as cover and refuge
(Crowl and Thomas 1997, p. 11). June sucker juveniles form schools near
the water surface, presumably feeding on zooplankton in the shallows.
Young-of-year suckers form shoals (aggregations of hundreds of fish)
near the surface under the cover of aquatic vegetation (Billman 2008,
p. 3).
However, effects from nonnative common carp, altered tributary
flows, lake water level management, nutrient loading, poor water
quality, and river channelization have reduced the amount of shallow,
warm, and complex vegetated aquatic habitat for rearing at the
tributary mouths and Utah Lake interface. This reduction in rearing
habitat has reduced survival of June suckers during the early life
stages (Modde and Muirhead 1990, p. 9; Olsen et al. 2002, p. 6),
resulting in reduced population viability and resiliency. As June
suckers reach the subadult stage, they begin to move offshore (Billman
2005, p. 16).
Species Abundance and Trends
Early accounts indicate that Utah Lake supported an enormous
population of June suckers (Heckmann et al. 1981, p. 8), and was
proclaimed ``the greatest sucker pond in the universe'' (Jordan 1878,
p. 2). The first major reductions in the number of June suckers were in
the late 1800s. Through the mid-1900s, June suckers were caught during
their spawning runs and widely used as fertilizer and food (Carter
1969, p. 7). During this period, an estimated 1,653 tons (1,500 metric
tons) of spawning suckers were killed when 2.1 mi (3.3 km) of the Provo
River was dewatered due to reduced water availability and high demand
(Carter 1969, p. 8).
Hundreds of tons of suckers also died when Utah Lake was nearly
emptied during a 1932-1935 drought (Tanner 1936, p. 3). After the
drought, June sucker populations gradually increased again, but due to
the combined impacts of ongoing drought, overexploitation, and habitat
destruction, the population did not return to its historical level
(Heckmann et al. 1981, p. 9). June suckers were rare in monitoring
surveys during the 1950s through the 1970s (Heckmann et al. 1981, p.
11; Radant and Sakaguchi 1981, p. 5).
By the time the species was listed under the Act (16 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.) in 1986, the June sucker had an estimated wild spawning
population of fewer than 1,000 individuals. In 1999, we estimated the
wild spawning population to be approximately 300 individuals, with no
evidence of wild recruitment (Keleher et al. 1998, pp. 12, 53; Service
1999, p. 5).
Due to the immediate threat of June sucker extinction at the time
of listing, the UDWR began raising populations in hatcheries and at
secure refuge sites. These efforts resulted in the stocking of June
suckers into Utah Lake to boost population numbers beginning in the
1990s and continuing through the present day (UDWR 2018b, p. 3). As of
2017, more than 800,000 captive-bred June suckers have been stocked in
Utah Lake (UDWR 2017b, p. 6). Stocking is planned to continue until the
wild population is self-sustaining, which will be determined by
population viability analysis (JSRIP 2018, p. 10).
Approximately 3,500 June suckers were spawning annually in Utah
Lake tributaries as of 2016 (Conner and Landom 2018, p. 2). This
represents at least a ten-fold increase in spawning fish from when the
recovery plan was finalized in 1999 (Conner and Landom 2018, p. 2). The
vast majority of fish detected spawning in Utah Lake tributaries are
stocked fish that have become naturalized (survived for multiple years
until reaching breeding age) (UDWR 2018c, p. 7). For all spawning
tributaries combined, the spawning population size for both sexes
substantially increased from 2008 to 2016, and the total known spawning
population size grew by 22 percent. These figures represent a minimum
number of confirmed spawning June
[[Page 195]]
suckers, not a population estimate. They do not include subadult or
juvenile individuals, non-spawning adults, untagged fish, or tagged
fish that were not detected via the monitoring antennae.
The actual population of wild June suckers in Utah Lake is likely
greater than 3,500, because this number represents only the spawning
adults. However, we did not attempt to extrapolate a total population
estimate from the adult spawning data because monitoring efforts in
tributaries were not consistent across all years, data were not
available for one year due to high flows, and the percentage and origin
of untagged fish in Utah Lake is not yet clear (Conner and Landom 2018,
p. 4). Stocked June suckers are tagged with a passive integrated
transponder (PIT). Untagged fish may be stocked fish that lost their
PIT tag or the result of reproduction (i.e., recruitment) in the wild
(UDWR 2017, entire).
Monitoring of June suckers in the lower Provo River during the 2018
spawning period captured a significant portion of fish that were not
PIT tagged (UDWR 2018, p. 3). The natural geochemical markers
(signatures) in the otoliths (ear bones) and fin rays of collected,
unmarked June suckers show that 39 percent (12 of 31) of these fish
likely originated from the FES hatchery; 42 percent from Red Butte
reservoir, other rearing facilities, or inconclusive; and 19 percent (6
of 31) had signatures indicating they originated in Utah Lake (Wolff
and Johnson 2013, p. 9), meaning they were likely recruited naturally
into Utah Lake. These results indicate that successful natural
reproduction and recruitment are occurring, although the exact location
and conditions that contributed to this successful natural recruitment
are not known. Additional analysis of June suckers of unknown origin is
planned within the next several years to determine the level of natural
recruitment occurring in Utah Lake. Regardless of origin, capture of
untagged fish indicates there is an unknown number of spawning June
suckers that were not accounted for in the spawning population
estimate.
The year-to-year survival rate of fish stocked into Utah Lake
varies significantly depending on a number of factors, including length
of fish at stock (which correlates to age) and time of year stocked
(Goldsmith et al. 2016, p. 5). June suckers stocked in early summer
that were 11.6 in (296 mm) in length or more (usually representing an
individual that was 2 years old) had a survival rate of 83 percent.
June suckers stocked at age 1 had survival rates ranging from 0 to 67
percent. The smallest June suckers, those stocked at under 7.9 in (200
mm), had a survival rate into the next year of only 2 percent
(Goldsmith et al. 2016, p. 14).
Year-to-year survival rates for spawning June suckers ranged from
65 to 95 percent depending on the tributary and the year (Goldsmith et
al. 2016, p. 3). Additionally, June suckers that were stocked more than
10 years prior were detected spawning on multiple occasions, indicating
the capability for long-term survival in Utah Lake (Conner and Landom
2018, p. 3). Between 2013 and 2016, June sucker showed a positive
population trend with a combined annual growth rate of 1.06 for females
and 1.04 for males across three tributaries (Provo River, Spanish Fork,
and Hobble Creek), with Provo River having the highest population
growth rate and Hobble Creek showing an overall decline (Conner and
Landom 2018, p. 3). However, nearly 50 percent of spawning June sucker
detected in Hobble Creek were of unknown origin. Therefore, a decline
in detected spawners in this tributary does not necessarily mean fewer
fish overall are using the tributary. Naturally recruited fish that
have never been tagged would not be detected by the remote electronic
methods used to collect June sucker presence information at spawning
locations.
In summary, the viability of June sucker in its native range--as
indicated by its representation, resiliency, and redundancy--has
improved significantly since the time of listing, largely due to the
efforts of the JSRIP (see Recovery, below). Stocking of June suckers, a
program designed to maximize representation through genetic diversity,
has been very successful at increasing the number of fish in Utah Lake.
Stocked individuals are behaving as wild fish by migrating to new
habitats, surviving many years, and participating in spawning
activities. The JSRIP stocking program is planning to continue until
the June sucker reaches self-sustaining population levels, with a focus
on stocking 2-year-old fish over 12 in (300 mm) long to increase their
chances of survival. The spawning population has increased at least
ten-fold since 1999; there is evidence of high year-to-year survival
rates and long-term survival for spawning individuals; and the spawning
population is increasing at a high rate, improving the resiliency of
the wild population. The stocking program and maintenance of two
additional populations (the refuge population at FES hatchery and the
introduced population at Red Butte Reservoir) also provide redundancy
to the wild population. In 2020-2021, a study is underway to improve
our understanding of the degree of natural recruitment of June sucker
in Utah Lake and the origin of untagged June suckers. This information
will, combined with future monitoring, yield a population estimate and
help inform future stocking rates and management decisions for the
purposes of further bolstering the species' representation, resiliency,
and redundancy to achieve full recovery.
Recovery
Section 4(f) of the Act directs us to develop and implement
recovery plans for the conservation and survival of endangered and
threatened species unless we determine that such a plan will not
promote the conservation of the species. Under section 4(f)(1)(B)(ii),
recovery plans must, to the maximum extent practicable, include
objective, measurable criteria which, when met, would result in a
determination, in accordance with the provisions of section 4 of the
Act, that the species be removed from the List.
Recovery plans provide a roadmap for us and our partners on methods
of enhancing conservation and minimizing threats to listed species, as
well as measurable criteria against which to evaluate progress towards
recovery and assess the species' likely future condition. However, they
are not regulatory documents and do not substitute for the
determinations and promulgation of regulations required under section
4(a)(1) of the Act. A decision to revise the status of a species, or to
delist a species, is ultimately based on an analysis of the best
scientific and commercial data available to determine whether a species
is no longer an endangered species or a threatened species, regardless
of whether that information differs from the recovery plan.
There are many paths to accomplishing recovery of a species, and
recovery may be achieved without all of the criteria in a recovery plan
being fully met. For example, one or more criteria may be exceeded
while other criteria may not yet be accomplished. In that instance, we
may determine that the threats are minimized sufficiently and that the
species is robust enough that it no longer meets the definition of an
endangered species or a threatened species. In other cases, we may
discover new recovery opportunities after having finalized the recovery
plan. Parties seeking to conserve the species may use these
opportunities instead of methods identified in the recovery plan.
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Likewise, we may learn new information about the species after we
finalize the recovery plan. The new information may change the extent
to which existing criteria are appropriate for identifying recovery of
the species. The recovery of a species is a dynamic process requiring
adaptive management that may, or may not, follow all of the guidance
provided in a recovery plan.
We finalized a recovery plan for June sucker in 1999, which
included recovery actions and recovery criteria for downlisting and
delisting of June sucker. These criteria lack specific metrics and will
be updated in a forthcoming revised recovery plan for the species.
However, they are still relevant to the evaluation of recovery, and we
discuss them in this document as one way to evaluate the change in
status of June sucker.
Since 2002, the JSRIP has funded, implemented, and overseen
recovery actions for the conservation of June sucker in accordance with
the guidance provided by the recovery plan, including using adaptive
management techniques to address new stressors as they arose. These
recovery actions include: (1) Acquiring and managing water flows, (2)
restoring habitat, (3) removing carp, and (4) augmenting the wild June
sucker population. These efforts, and how they relate to the recovery
criteria, are described in the following paragraphs.
Acquisition and Management of Water Flows
The first downlisting criterion requires that Provo River flows
essential for June sucker spawning and recruitment are protected
(Service 2011, p. 5). We consider this criterion to have been met. The
JSRIP provides annual recommendations for river flows to support June
suckers on the Provo River and Hobble Creek based on the known biology
of the species and the historical flow levels to the CUWCD and other
water-managing bodies. The JSRIP has also acquired water totaling over
21,000 acre-ft (25,903,080 cubic m (m\3\)) per year to enhance flows
during the spawning season on the Provo River and to supplement base
flows through the summer for the benefit of larval June sucker.
Approximately 13,000 acre-ft (16,035,240 m\3\) of this water is
permanently allocated, and the remainder is allocated through 2021. The
JSRIP is pursuing additional water, permanent and temporary, to bolster
June sucker allocations after 2021 (JSRIP 2018, p. 5). Additionally,
the JSRIP has acquired 8,500 acre-ft (10,485,000 m\3\) of permanent
water for Hobble Creek, up to 4,500 acre-ft (5,550,660 m\3\) of which
may be used to supplement Provo river flows as needed in any given year
(USBR 2017, pp. 3-5). These protected water sources, when delivered as
additional water, provide added resiliency by improving habitat quality
for the species, and operational flexibility to address fluctuating
annual precipitation scenarios in a timely manner.
The amount of water delivered to supplement flows in the Provo
River and Hobble Creek and the timing of those deliveries are
determined annually through a cooperative process involving multiple
agencies. In 1996, the June Sucker Flow Work Group (Flow Work Group)
was formed by the USBR, DOI Central Utah Project Completion Act (CUPCA)
Office, Provo River Water Users Association, Provo River Water
Commissioner, CUWCD, UDWR, the Service, Provo City Public Works, and
the URMCC. These agencies initially worked together to adjust reservoir
releases to mimic a Provo River spring runoff hydrograph and improve
June sucker spawning success. Since 2002, this process has been
overseen by the JSRIP.
As recovery-specific water was acquired, the role of the Flow Work
Group expanded to provide a forum for determining the optimal delivery
pattern of supplemental flows. Based on existing conditions for a given
year (e.g., snow pack and reservoir storage), the multi-disciplinary
work group uses operational flexibility for reservoir water delivery
and runoff timing to evaluate and operate the system to deliver year-
round flows to benefit June sucker recovery. Based on recommendations
of the Flow Work Group, the JSRIP makes annual recommendations for flow
deliveries to the Provo River and Hobble Creek, adjusted for the
available water conditions. Water managers (including USBR, CUPCA,
Provo River Water Users Association, the Provo River Water
Commissioner, CUWCD, and Provo City Public Works) then work to deliver
water to meet that specific annual recommendation and have been
successful in meeting the hydrograph scenarios agreed to by the Flow
Work Group on an annual basis since 2004.
In 2004, the CUWCD, in cooperation with the Service and other
members of the Flow Work Group, agreed on operational scenarios that
mimic dry, moderate, and wet year flow patterns for the Provo River
(CUWCD et al. 2004, p. 17). The Flow Work Group applied these
operational scenarios in determining the spawning season flow pattern
for the Provo River with the goal of benefiting June sucker recovery.
In 2008, an ecosystem-based flow regime recommendation was finalized
for the lower Provo River (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 13). This year-round
flow recommendation refined the operational scenarios identified in
2004, through the incorporation of relevant ecological functions into
the in-stream flow analysis. Hydrologic variability, geomorphology,
water quality, aquatic biology, and riparian biology were considered as
aspects of flow recommendations. The year-round flow recommendations
are adaptive, with consideration of the variability within and among
each water year. These include recommendations for a baseline flow, a
spring runoff flow, and the duration of the rising and receding flow
periods before and after runoff. As more is learned about the
associations between flow and river functions, the recommendations can
be adjusted (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 10). In 2015, the JSRIP passed a
resolution affirming this process, which further defined how flows in
the Provo River should be prioritized for the benefit of the June
sucker, and defined the roles of partners in supporting the water needs
of June sucker in the Provo River (JSRIP 2015, entire).
In 2009, ecosystem-based flow recommendations were developed for
Hobble Creek in the Lower Hobble Creek Ecosystem Flow Recommendations
Report (Stamp et al. 2009, pp. 11-12). These recommendations were
adopted by the JSRIP, included in the East Hobble Creek Restoration
Project Environmental Analysis (JSRIP 2009, p. 5), and are currently
considered each April when determining the annual recommendations for
delivery of flows to Hobble Creek (DOI et al. 2013, p. 41). Similar to
the Provo River, these recommendations are intended to be adaptive. In
2012, the JSRIP passed a resolution affirming this process, which
further defines how flows in Hobble Creek should be prioritized for the
benefit of June sucker, and defines the roles of partners in supporting
the water needs of June sucker in Hobble Creek (JSRIP 2012, entire).
Habitat Restoration
The second downlisting criterion for June sucker requires that
spawning and brood-rearing habitat in the Provo River and Utah Lake be
enhanced or established to provide for the continued existence of all
life stages (Service 1999, p. 4). We consider this criterion to have
been met. Habitat restoration projects occurred on the Provo River and
Hobble Creek, and habitat quality was enhanced in Utah Lake as a result
of nonnative
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species removal (see Carp Removal, below).
Modifications of the Fort Field diversion structure on the Provo
River, located within critical habitat, were completed in October 2009.
This modification made an additional 1.2 mi (1.9 km) of spawning
habitat available for the June sucker, permitting fish passage farther
upstream in the historical range (URMCC 2009, pp. 8-9; JSRIP 2008, p.
12). During the 2010 spawning season, June suckers were observed in the
Provo River upstream of the modified Fort Field Diversion structure
(UDWR 2011, pp. 7-8). In cooperation with the JSRIP, the CUWCD and
URMCC are working with other diverters on the Provo River to evaluate
further diversion structure removal or modification.
The JSRIP is also implementing a large-scale stream channel and
delta restoration project for the lower Provo River and its interface
with Utah Lake, called the Provo River Delta Restoration Project
(PRDRP). This project will restore, enhance, and create habitat
conditions in the lower Provo River for spawning, hatching, larval
transport, rearing, and recruitment of the June sucker to the adult
life stage, thus increasing the species' resiliency (Olson et al. 2002,
p. 15; BIO-WEST 2010, p. 3). The PRDRP will reestablish some of the
historical delta conditions in the Provo River, thereby increasing
habitat complexity and providing appropriate physical and biological
conditions necessary for egg hatching, larval development, growth,
young-of-year survival, and recruitment of young fish into the adult
population. A final environmental impact statement (EIS) for the PRDRP
was released in April 2015, with a record of decision signed in May
2015. Federal agencies have acquired lands needed for the PRDRP and
developed a detailed design to provide optimal rearing habitat for June
sucker (PRDRP 2017, entire). Work began spring of 2020, and is expected
to be completed in 2024 (Stamp 2020, pers. comm.).
Shortly after formation of the JSRIP, and based on delisting
criteria identified in the 1999 June Sucker Recovery Plan (Service
1999, pp. 5-6), several Utah Lake tributaries were evaluated for the
purpose of establishing a second spawning run of June sucker in
addition to the Provo River spawning run (Stamp et al. 2002, p. 13).
Depending on the availability of water in any given year, June suckers
will use multiple other tributaries for spawning, including Spanish
Fork, American Fork, and Current Creek. However, not all tributaries
are available in every year, due to changing lake levels and water
availability. Therefore, we determined that an additional, reliably
available (i.e., available every year) spawning run would improve
redundancy for the species by providing security in the event that a
catastrophic event eliminated the Provo River spawning habitat. Hobble
Creek provides the best opportunity of the available spawning
tributaries for establishing a second consistent spawning run (Stamp et
al. 2002, p. 13). Hobble Creek is more frequently available to fish in
low water years compared to other tributaries. However, Hobble Creek
would still require habitat enhancements to make it suitable for
consistent, annual June sucker spawning runs and allow for the
development of quality rearing habitat for young suckers (Stamp et al.
2002, p. 13).
In 2008, the lower 0.5 mi (0.8 km) of Hobble Creek was relocated
and reconstructed on land purchased by the JSRIP to provide June sucker
spawning habitat, a more naturally functioning stream channel, and
suitable nursery habitat for young suckers. The JSRIP partnered with
the Utah Transit Authority to implement the habitat restoration project
on the purchased property (DOI 2008, p. 14). The project re-created a
functioning delta at the interface between Hobble Creek and Utah Lake,
and allowed the reestablishment of a June sucker spawning run. The
restoration resulted in more active river processes and includes
numerous seasonally inundated off-channel ponds, which serve as larval
nursery and rearing habitat to increase larval fish growth and survival
(DOI 2008, p. 22).
In 2009, June suckers spawned in the restored Hobble Creek, with
verified larval production (Landom and Crowl 2010, pp. 1-12), and in
2010, juvenile June suckers (from 2009 spawning) were found in ponds
within the Hobble Creek restoration area (Landress 2011, p. 4). Due to
the success of the restoration, additional reaches of Hobble Creek have
been selected for habitat enhancements to increase the amount of
available spawning habitat. For example, approximately 1 mi (1.6 km)
upstream of the lower Hobble Creek restoration area, the East Hobble
Creek Restoration Project was completed to enhance the stream channel
by increasing floodplain width, sinuosity, and floodplain connectivity;
modify or remove diversion structures; and provide additional stream
flows for Hobble Creek (JSRIP 2016b, p. 17). An age-1 June sucker was
observed in this area in January 2018, indicating that June suckers are
using this area for rearing (Fonken 2018, pers. comm.).
Improving water quality in Utah Lake is also an important part of
enhancing June sucker habitat. In the interest of supporting June
sucker recovery through increased water quality, the Utah Division of
Water Quality (UDWQ) became a member of the JSRIP in 2017 (JSRIP 2017).
As part of the State's commitment to water quality management and
improvement in Utah Lake, UDWQ formed a science panel composed of
independent experts and representatives of all stakeholder agencies for
the express purpose of furthering scientific understanding of the
conditions in Utah Lake and creating a comprehensive plan for
improvement. This plan will support June sucker recovery by including
recommendations for actions and threshold limits of nutrients and other
anthropogenic inputs for the benefit of June sucker specifically and
the Utah Lake ecosystem as a whole (UDWQ 2017, entire).
Carp Removal
The third downlisting criterion requires that nonnative species
that present a threat to the continued existence of June sucker are
reduced or eliminated from Utah Lake. We consider this criterion met,
but ongoing. The common carp was identified as the nonnative species
having the greatest adverse impact on June sucker habitat and
resiliency, due to the large-scale changes in water quality and
macrophytic vegetation caused by these fish (see Distribution and
Habitat, above).
In 2009, a mechanical removal program was instituted to remove
common carp from Utah Lake. Between 2009 and 2017, over 13,000 tons
(11,750 metric tons) of common carp were removed from the lake (UDWR
2017c, p. 2). This removal resulted in a decline of the common carp
population. Catch-per-unit effort of common carp has decreased over the
past 4 years, while average weight of individual common carp has
increased, thus indicating a trend of reduction in common carp density
in Utah Lake (Gaeta and Landom 2017, p. 7).
In 2015, after 6 years of common carp removal, native macrophytes
were observed in Utah Lake vegetation monitoring studies for the first
time (Landom 2016, pers. comm.). As of 2017, multiple sites in the lake
have native littoral vegetation, including sites with increasing
complexity supporting more than four native macrophytic species at one
site (Dillingham 2018, entire). Sites with more complex
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vegetation support a higher diversity of macroinvertebrates, which
provide additional food for June sucker, provide greater opportunities
for June sucker to shelter from predators, and indicate improved water
quality in the lake (Dillingham 2018, entire).
The common carp removal program in Utah Lake has a positive impact
on habitat quality, which may be contributing to natural recruitment
and survival rates for the June sucker (Gaeta and Landom 2017, p. 8;
see Species Abundance and Trends, above). Ongoing research by Utah
State University continues to assess the relationship between common
carp removal, habitat improvement, and June sucker population response
as well as develop long-term recommendations for sustainable common
carp management (Gaeta et al. 2018, entire). The JSRIP prioritizes
continued suppression of the common carp population via mechanical
removal, as well as research into genetically modified sterile (YY)
male technology that has the potential to reduce or eliminate carp from
Utah Lake in the future (JSRIP 2018, p. 2).
Population Augmentation
The fourth and final downlisting criterion in the June sucker
recovery plan is that an increasing, self-sustaining spawning run of
wild June sucker resulting in significant recruitment over 10 years has
been reestablished in the Provo River. We consider this criterion to be
ongoing. This criterion does not define ``significant'' recruitment.
Although the spawning population of June sucker is increasing, annual
stocking continues in order to maintain the population. An augmentation
plan for the June sucker set a goal, for the purposes of meeting the
recovery criterion of a self-sustaining population, of stocking 2.8
million individuals into Utah Lake (Service and URMCC 1998, entire).
The goal was based on early studies of June sucker survival and the
production capabilities of the facilities. As of 2017, more than
800,000 captive-bred June sucker have been stocked in Utah Lake from
the various rearing locations, and a long-term, continued stocking
strategy based on the most up-to-date research on stocking success and
survival rates is under development (JSRIP 2008, p. 8; UDWR 2017b, p.
6).
Although the June sucker has not yet met this downlisting criterion
identified in the 1999 recovery plan, we find that the population
increases and trends achieved thus far (see Species Abundance and
Trends, above), along with the addition of refuge populations to
increase redundancy and genetic representation, support downlisting the
species. The criterion of an increasing, self-sustaining spawning run
of wild June sucker resulting in significant recruitment over 10 years
is more suitable as a delisting criterion and indicative of full
recovery.
Overall, recovery actions have addressed many of the threats and
stressors affecting the June sucker. The JSRIP has been effective in
collaborating to implement a stocking program, increase June sucker
spawning locations, acquire and manage water flows, remove nonnative
common carp, and develop and conduct habitat restorations that target
all life stages of June sucker. Studies are planned to improve
understanding of the effects of other threats and stressors, including
lake water quality and the impact of other invasive species on the June
sucker. The JSRIP continues to be active and committed to full recovery
of the June sucker.
Summary of Factors Affecting the Species
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533) and its implementing
regulations (50 CFR part 424) set forth the procedures for listing
species, reclassifying species, or removing species from listed status.
``Species'' is defined by the Act as including any species or
subspecies of fish or wildlife or plants, and any distinct vertebrate
population segment of fish or wildlife that interbreeds when mature (16
U.S.C. 1532(16)). The Act defines an endangered species as a species
that is ``in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant
portion of its range,'' and a threatened species as a species that is
``likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future
throughout all or a significant portion of its range.''
The Act requires that we determine whether any species is an
``endangered species'' or a ``threatened species'' because of any of
the following factors:
(A) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or
curtailment of its habitat or range;
(B) Overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or
educational purposes;
(C) Disease or predation;
(D) The inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; or
(E) Other natural or manmade factors affecting its continued
existence.
These factors represent broad categories of natural or human-caused
actions or conditions that could have an effect on a species' continued
existence. In evaluating these actions and conditions, we look for
those that may have a negative effect on individuals of the species, as
well as other actions or conditions that may ameliorate any negative
effects or may have positive effects.
We must consider these same five factors in downlisting a species
from endangered to threatened. Under our regulations at 50 CFR
424.11(c)-(e), we may downlist a species if, after a review of the
species' status, the best available scientific and commercial data
indicate that the species no longer meets the definition of an
endangered species, but that it meets the definition of a threatened
species.
For the purposes of this analysis, we evaluate whether or not the
June sucker meets the Act's definition of an ``endangered species'' or
a ``threatened species,'' based on the best scientific and commercial
information available. We use the term ``threat'' to refer in general
to actions or conditions that are known to or are reasonably likely to
negatively affect individuals of a species. The term ``threat''
includes actions or conditions that directly affect individuals (direct
impacts), as well as those that affect individuals through alteration
of their habitat or required resources (stressors). The term ``threat''
may encompass--either together or separately--the source of the action
or condition or the action or condition itself.
However, the mere identification of any threat(s) does not
necessarily mean that the species meets the statutory definition of an
``endangered species'' or a ``threatened species.'' In determining
whether a species meets either definition, we must evaluate all
identified threats by considering the species' expected response and
the effects of the threats--with regard to those actions and conditions
that will ameliorate the threats--on an individual, population, and
species level. We evaluate each threat and its expected effects on the
species and then analyze the cumulative effect of all of the threats on
the species as a whole. We also consider the cumulative effect of the
threats with regard to those actions and conditions that will have
positive effects on the species--such as any existing regulatory
mechanisms or conservation efforts. The Secretary determines whether
the species meets the Act's definition of an ``endangered species'' or
a ``threatened species'' only after conducting this cumulative analysis
and describing the expected effect on the species now and in the
foreseeable future.
The Act does not define the term ``foreseeable future,'' which
appears in the statutory definition of ``threatened species.'' Our
implementing regulations
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at 50 CFR 424.11(d) set forth a framework for evaluating the
foreseeable future on a case-by-case basis. The term foreseeable future
extends only so far into the future as we can reasonably determine that
both the future threats and the species' responses to those threats are
likely. In other words, the foreseeable future is the period of time in
which we can make reliable predictions. ``Reliable'' does not mean
``certain''; it means sufficient to provide a reasonable degree of
confidence in the prediction. Thus, a prediction is reliable if it is
reasonable to depend on it when making decisions.
It is not always possible or necessary to define foreseeable future
as a particular number of years. Analysis of the foreseeable future
uses the best scientific and commercial data available and should
consider the timeframes applicable to the relevant threats and to the
species' likely responses to those threats in view of its life-history
characteristics. Data that are typically relevant to assessing the
species' biological response include species-specific factors such as
lifespan, reproductive rates or productivity, certain behaviors, and
other demographic factors.
In our determination, we correlate the threats acting on the
species to the factors in section 4(a)(1) of the Act.
The following analysis examines factors currently affecting the
June sucker or that are likely to affect it within the foreseeable
future. For each factor, we examine the threats at the time of listing
in 1986 (or if not present at the time of listing, the status of the
threat when first detected), the downlisting criterion pertinent to the
threat, what conservation actions have been taken to meet the
downlisting criteria or otherwise mitigate the threat, the current
status of the threat, and its likely future impact on June sucker. We
also consider stressors not originally considered at the time of
listing, most notably climate change.
Habitat Destruction and Modification
Loss and alteration of spawning and rearing habitat were major
factors leading to the listing of the June sucker (51 FR 10851; March
31, 1986) and continue to pose a threat to the species' overall
resiliency and its recovery. Suitable spawning and rearing habitat in
Utah Lake and its tributaries declined due to water development,
habitat modification, introduction of common carp, and urbanization,
but has improved since listing due to recovery actions taken by the
JSRIP.
Water Development and Habitat Modification
Water development and substantial habitat modifications have
occurred in the Utah Lake drainage since the mid-1800s. These changes
include the reduction in riverine flows (including the Provo River)
from numerous water diversions, various water storage projects,
channelization, and additional lake and in-stream alterations (Radant
et al. 1987, p. 13; UDWR and UDNR 1997, p. 11; Andersen et al. 2007, p.
8). Many of these modifications and water depletions remain today, and
continue to hinder the quantity and quality of June sucker rearing and
spawning habitat, which in turn impacts species resiliency.
In 1849, settlers founded Fort Utah along the Provo River and began
modifying the waters of Utah Lake and its main tributaries (USBR 1989,
p. 3). In 1872, a low dam was placed across the lake outflow to the
Jordan River, changing the function of Utah Lake into a storage
reservoir (CUWCD 2004, p. 2). By the early 1900s, a pumping plant was
constructed at the outflow to allow the lake to be lowered below the
outlet elevation; this structure has since been modified and enlarged
(Andersen et al. 2007, p. 5). The present capacity of the pumping plant
is 1,050 cubic feet per second (cfs) (29.7 cubic meters per second
(cms)), and it can lower the lake level 8-10 ft (2.4-3.0 m) below the
compromise elevation of 4,489 ft (1,368 m) (Andersen et al. 2007, p.
5). The compromise elevation is a managed lake elevation target that
the responsible water authorities have agreed not to exceed through the
active storage of water. This compromise elevation was intended to
balance the threat of flooding among lands adjacent to Utah Lake and
those downstream along the Jordan River (CUWCD 2004, p. 7).
As a storage reservoir, the surface elevation of Utah Lake
fluctuates widely. Prior to the influence of water development
projects, annual fluctuations averaged 2.1 ft (0.6 m) per year. For
approximately 50 years, under the influence of water development
projects, water levels fluctuated an average of 3.5 ft (1.0 m) annually
prior to the completion of the Central Utah Project. The Central Utah
Project was the largest water resources development program in Utah,
distributing portions of Utah's share of Colorado River water. After
its completion, annual lake fluctuations averaged 2.5 ft (0.8 m)
(Hickman and Thurin 2007, p. 20). Fluctuation in surface elevation of
Utah Lake (particularly while the Central Utah Project was under
construction) is one of the possible factors that contributed to the
marked degradation of shoreline habitat and aquatic vegetation in the
lake and to a decline in June sucker refugial habitat from predators
(Hickman and Thurin 2007, p. 23).
The long history of water management in the Provo River, including
river alterations, dredging, and channelization efforts, has modified
the historical braided and complex delta into a single trapezoidal
channel (Radant et al. 1987, p. 15; Olsen et al. 2002, p. 11). The
current channel lacks vegetative cover, habitat complexity, and the
food sources necessary to sustain larval fishes rearing in the lower
Provo River (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 20). Additionally, the lower 2 mi
(3.2 km) of the Provo River experience a backwater effect, where the
velocity stalls under low-flow scenarios and a high seasonal lake level
causes the water to back up from the lake into the Provo River (Stamp
et al. 2008, p. 20). The slack water substantially reduces the number
of larvae drifting into the lake. As a result of their poorly developed
swimming abilities, the larvae either starve or are consumed by
predators in this lower stretch of river (Ellsworth et al. 2010, p. 9).
Because of the extensive modification of the lower Provo River, in the
past, most June sucker larvae have not survived longer than 20 days
after hatching (Ellsworth et al. 2010, pp. 9-10). The upcoming PRDRP is
designed to increase survival of larvae by providing additional rearing
habitat along the Provo River (PRDRP 2017, entire).
Similar to the Provo River, Hobble Creek and other tributaries of
significance (Spanish Fork River and American Fork River) have been
extensively modified by human activities. The hydrological regimes are
altered by multiple dams and diversions, and the stream channels have
been straightened and dredged into incised trapezoidal canals (Stamp et
al. 2002, p. 5). These alterations resulted in the streams becoming
isolated from their historical floodplains and having modified flow
velocities and pool-riffle sequences (Stamp et al. 2002, p. 6). Until
recent restoration efforts were implemented, the Hobble Creek channel
had almost no gradient and ended without a defined connection to the
lake interface in Provo Bay due to diversion structures and dredging.
In the past, the channel was blocked by debris that created barriers to
fish migration, preventing adult June suckers from accessing the main
stem of Hobble Creek.
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Located south of Provo Bay, the Spanish Fork River is the second
largest stream inflow to Utah Lake, but the majority of the discharge
is diverted during the irrigation season (June through September;
Psomas 2007, p. 12). Adult and larval June suckers occur in the Spanish
Fork River (UDWR 2006, p. 2; 2007, p. 2; 2008a, p. 3; 2009a, p. 4;
2010b, p. 2); however, the seasonally inadequate flows, poor June
sucker rearing habitat at the Utah Lake interface, low water clarity,
diversion structures, and miles of levees along the channel are
obstacles to successful recruitment (Stamp et al. 2002, p. 5). Adult
spawning habitat is limited to the lower 2.7 mi (4.3 km) of the Spanish
Fork River, where it is of poor quality. Other tributaries where
spawning may occur under favorable conditions include the American Fork
River and Battle Creek, but streamflow to Utah Lake in these
tributaries is not available most years; therefore, they are not found
to comprise a significant portion of June sucker spawning habitat.
Recovery actions for the June sucker to address impacts from water
development and habitat modification have included water acquisition,
water flow management, and habitat restoration (see Recovery, above).
The availability of quality spawning habitat will improve species
resiliency, and multiple spawning tributaries will improve species
redundancy. The positive trend in spawning population numbers,
increased number of June suckers, and observations of young-of-year and
age-1 June suckers in the wild indicate that water acquisition, water
flow management, and habitat restoration have had a positive impact on
June sucker reproduction (JSRIP 2018, p. 1; see Species Abundance and
Trends, above).
Introduction of Common Carp
Historically, Utah Lake had a rich array of rooted aquatic
vegetation, which provided nursery and rearing habitat for young June
suckers (Heckmann et al. 1981, p. 2; Ellsworth et al. 2010, p. 9).
However, with the introduction of common carp around the 1880s (Sigler
and Sigler 1996, pp. 5-6), this refugial habitat largely disappeared.
Common carp physically uproot and consume macrophytes and disturb
sediments, increasing turbidity and decreasing light penetration, which
inhibits macrophyte establishment (Crowl and Miller 2004, pp. 11-12).
Although not specifically identified at the time of listing in 1986,
the successful establishment of common carp and their effects on the
Utah Lake ecosystem are a threat to the June sucker (SWCA 2002, p. 19).
However, the previously described carp removal program reduced carp
populations and increased macrophytic vegetation in the lake, improving
resiliency of the June sucker (see Recovery, above).
Urbanization
Rapid urbanization on the floodplains of Utah Lake tributaries
stimulated extensive flood and erosion control activities in lake
tributaries and reduced available land for the natural meandering of
the historical river channels (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 4). Channelization
for flood control and additional channel manipulation for erosion
control further reduced riverine habitat complexity and reduced the
total length of tributary rivers for spawning and early-life-stage use
(Stamp et al. 2008, pp. 12-13). It is anticipated that further urban
infrastructure development is likely, as the populations of cities
bordering Utah Lake and its tributaries continue to increase.
Among the potential impacts from continued urbanization near Utah
Lake is the potential for the construction of bridges or other
transportation crossings. One example is the Utah Crossing project, a
causeway across Utah Lake proposed in 2009 (Service 2009, entire). An
updated application for the project to proceed has not been filed with
Utah's Department of Transportation; however, as development continues
on the western side of Utah Lake, the potential need for some type of
crossing may increase.
A large-scale project to dredge Utah Lake, remove invasive species,
and build habitable islands for private development was proposed in
2017, and is under early stages of planning and review at the State
level (ULRP 2018, entire). This project has not received any approval
or necessary permits at the State or Federal level. We do not expect
this Utah Lake Restoration Project or the Utah Crossing project to move
forward or impact the June sucker in the next 5-10 years. All
development projects on Utah Lake are subject to Federal and State
laws, and require consultation with the Service prior to beginning
work. However, such projects could potentially impact the June sucker
by increasing habitat for predatory fish and restricting June sucker
movement in Utah Lake (Service 2009, entire). Additional impacts to
water quality due to the runoff from new structures could also pose a
threat to the June sucker (Service 2009, entire). The UDWQ is
partnering with the Utah Lake Commission and other stakeholders to
research and provide recommendations to improve water quality and
address impacts of urbanization and other factors that may negatively
impact future water quality (UDWQ 2017, entire).
Lake Water Quality
Utah Lake is hypereutrophic, characterized by frequent algal blooms
and high turbidity (Merritt 2004, p. 14; Psomas 2007, p. 12). The
increased turbidity, decreased water quality, and historical change in
the plant community from macrophyte-dominated to algae-dominated (see
Habitat Restoration, above) affect the fishes of Utah Lake, including
the June sucker.
High turbidity decreases the feeding ability of many species of
planktivorous fish (Brett and Groot 1963, pp. 5-6; Vinyard and O'Brien
1976, p. 3), and can result in a lack of access to sufficient food for
rearing juveniles. Thus, elevated turbidity levels may decrease feeding
efficiency of June suckers by limiting their ability to visually prey
on preferred plankton food types.
Utah Lake is listed on Utah's 2016 section 303(d) list for
exceedance of State criteria for total phosphorus and TDS
concentrations (UDWQ 2018, p. 3-7). The majority of the total
phosphorus load to Utah Lake is from point sources. Although Utah Lake
has naturally elevated salinity levels compared to other intermountain
freshwater lakes, the concentrations are substantially higher today
than they were before human development (Psomas 2007, p. 8). Within
Utah Lake, natural salinity levels are due in part to high evaporation
rates, which are a function of the lake's large surface-area-to-depth
ratio and drainage basin characteristics. Evaporation naturally removes
about 50 percent of the total volume of water that flows into the lake,
resulting in a doubling of the mean salt concentration in water passing
through the lake (Fuhriman et al. 1981, p. 7).
In addition, several natural mineral springs near the shores of
Utah Lake contribute dissolved salts, although the magnitude and effect
of these sources has not been quantitatively evaluated (Hatton 1932, p.
2). Evaporative losses continue to be the main driver of salinity
concentrations in Utah Lake. However, settlement and development of the
Utah Lake basin since the 1800s led to increases in irrigation return
flows containing dissolved salts, which likely exacerbated natural
salinity concentrations within Utah Lake (Sanchez 1904, p. 1). Despite
the human influences on inflows, in recent years, salinity levels in
Utah Lake have not
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increased markedly (Psomas 2007, p. 13). The UDWQ continues to monitor
Utah Lake for any changes in salinity concentrations.
The effects of increased salinity concentrations on the various
life stages of June suckers are unknown. Egg size, hatching success,
and mean total length of larvae decreased as salinity levels increased
for another lake sucker that occurs in Nevada, the cui-ui (Chasmistes
cujus; Chatto 1979, p. 7). However, salinity concentrations were much
higher in the cui-ui habitat than any recorded concentrations in Utah
Lake.
Natural nutrient loading to the lake is high due to the nutrient-
and sediment-rich watershed surrounding the lake (Fuhriman et al. 1981,
p. 12). Additionally, human development in the drainage increased the
naturally high inflow of sediments and nutrients to the lake (Fuhriman
et al. 1981, p. 12). Sewage effluent entering the lake accounts for 50,
76, and 80 percent of all nitrogen, total phosphorous, and ortho-
phosphate, respectively (Psomas 2007, p. 12). Phosphorus inputs to the
lake (297.6 tons (270.0 metric tons) per year) exceed exports (83.5
tons (75.7 metric tons) per year) during all months of the year. Thus,
the lake acts as a phosphorus sink, accumulating approximately 214 tons
(194.1 metric tons) annually (Psomas 2007, p. 15). These high nutrient
loads increase the frequency and extent of large blue-green algal
blooms, which greatly affect overall food web dynamics in Utah Lake
(Crowl et al. 1998b, p. 13). Blue-green algae is inedible to many
zooplankton species, which decreases zooplankton abundance and its
availability as a food source for the June sucker (Landom et al. 2010,
p. 19). Reductions in feeding rates translate into long-term effects
such as decreased condition, growth rates, and fish survival (Sigler et
al. 1984, p. 7; Hayes et al. 1992, p. 9). Furthermore, the increased
algal biomass limits available light for submergent vegetation
(Scheffer 1998, p. 19), thus reducing refugial habitat for early life
stages of June sucker. The frequency and size of algal blooms may be
increasing based on large-scale algal blooms that occurred in 2016 and
2017 (UDWQ 2017, p. 3).
Although there is a significant amount of research indicating that
algal blooms can be harmful to many types of fish, we do not have
direct evidence regarding the degree or manner in which they impact
June suckers in Utah Lake (Psomas 2007, p. 14; Crowl 2015, entire). No
fish kills were documented during recent bloom events, but post-
stocking monitoring of June sucker has noted that, during algal blooms,
fish movement decreased measurably (Goldsmith et al. 2017, p. 13).
The average Utah Lake TDS concentration is about 900 parts per
million (ppm)/milligrams per liter (mg/L), but large variations occur,
depending on the water year (Hickman and Thurin 2007, p. 9). There is
no evidence of direct mortality to June suckers due to higher salinity
levels, but it is possible that increased salinity, when combined with
increased nutrient input and turbidity, may negatively affect June
suckers by reducing zooplankton and refugial habitat abundance as
described above. Further study of June sucker responses during high
salinity events is needed to better understand this relationship.
Water quality concerns in Utah Lake are being addressed through a
large-scale study and the formation of a steering committee and science
panel to develop recommendations for Utah Lake water quality for the
benefit of June sucker (UDWQ 2017, entire).
Riverine Water Quality
Prior to 1986, the year in which we listed the June sucker,
riverine water quality was heavily impacted by water withdrawal,
agricultural and municipal effluents, and habitat modification. The
water withdrawals reduced the ability of the rivers to effectively
transport sediments and other materials from the river channel.
Furthermore, withdrawals influenced temperature, dissolved oxygen, and
pollutant and nutrient concentrations (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 18).
Diverted streams with reduced, shallow summertime base flows are very
susceptible to solar heating and can experience lethally warm water
temperatures (above 80 degrees Fahrenheit ([deg]F) or 27 degrees
Celsius ([deg]C), depending on life stage). High water temperature,
especially if combined with stagnant flow velocities, can lead to low
dissolved oxygen levels in streams where flows have been reduced (Stamp
et al. 2008, p. 19).
Artificially high temperatures may also occur in streams where flow
regime alterations and channelization have limited the recruitment of
woody riparian vegetation, thereby reducing the amount of streamside
shading (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 19). Subsequently, extensive
colonization by filamentous algae can occur in warmer temperatures,
creating extreme daily dissolved oxygen fluctuations that are harmful
to June sucker (Service 1994, p. 12). Agricultural and municipal
effluents enrich production of algae, further impacting daily dissolved
oxygen levels. These effluents can cause fish kills if significant
runoff from agricultural and municipal properties occurs during low
flow periods. Furthermore, heavy algal growth can cause the armoring of
spawning gravels and aid in the accumulation of fine sediments that
degrade spawning habitat quality (Stamp et al. 2008, p. 32).
The Provo River is listed on Utah's 2016 section 303(d) list for
impairments harmful to cold-water aquatic life. Additionally, water
quality is poor in the river's lower reaches during summer low-flow
periods due to low dissolved oxygen levels and elevated temperatures
(Stamp et al. 2008, p. 34). It is likely that the recent
supplementation of flows for June sucker recovery in the Provo River
are minimizing the risk of lethal temperatures and dissolved oxygen
fluctuations by providing water during critical periods and maintaining
base flows throughout the summer while larvae are developing. The
planned PRDRP will provide additional water storage and refugial
habitat (see Recovery, above).
Hobble Creek is not on the Utah section 303(d) list as an impaired
waterbody. However, there are indications that total phosphorus and
temperature may be problematic in Hobble Creek during certain times of
the year (Stamp et al. 2009, pp. 22-23). Average total phosphorous
concentration is 0.06 ppm/mg/L, which exceeds the Utah indicator value
of 0.05 ppm/mg/L (Stamp et al. 2009, p. 24). In addition, creek
temperatures exceed 68 [deg]F (20 [deg]C), which is the State cold-
water fishery standard; this temperature increase typically occurs
during summer days when air temperatures are high and flow in the
channel is low (Stamp et al. 2009, p. 26). Similar to the Provo River,
the augmentation of stream flows in Hobble Creek has likely minimized
the risk of lethal temperatures by providing flows during critical
periods.
Effects of Climate Change
The predicted increase in global average temperatures is expected
to negatively affect water quality in shallow lakes (Mooij et al. 2007,
p. 2). Turbid shallow lakes such as Utah Lake are likely to have higher
summer chlorophyll-a concentrations with a stronger dominance of blue-
green algae and reduced zooplankton abundance from the effects of
climate change (Mooij et al. 2007, p. 5). This could affect June sucker
food resources since zooplankton are the primary food source for the
species.
In Utah, an increase in the intensity of naturally occurring future
droughts and unprecedented warming are
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expected (Frankson et al. 2017, p. 2). Projected changes in winter
precipitation include an increase in the fractions falling as rain,
rather than snow, and potentially decreasing snowpack water storage
(Frankson et al. 2017, p. 2). These changes in timing and amount of
flow could affect June sucker spawning, because the spawning cues of
increased runoff and water temperature, on which the June sucker relies
to determine spawning time, would potentially occur earlier in the
year.
As changes to water availability and timing occur in the future,
the JSRIP will need to coordinate reservoir operations to ensure timely
releases. If runoff and upstream reservoir volumes are insufficient,
peak and base flows desired in spawning tributaries will be reduced.
This, in turn, would negatively impact the early season attractant
flows needed by spawning adults, and potentially limit flows needed by
larval suckers to move into downstream rearing habitats. As previously
described, the JSRIP partnership has acquired 13,000 acre-ft
(16,035,240 m\3\) of permanent water for the Provo River and 8,500
acre-ft (10,485,000 m\3\) for Hobble Creek. Flows in both systems are
intensively managed with consideration for the June sucker. Still,
additional permanent water acquisitions may become necessary to secure
water that can be used to supplement flows during critical spawning and
rearing periods as the climate shifts.
Summary of Habitat-Based Threats
Water development and habitat modification, common carp,
urbanization, and water quality are threats to the June sucker.
Additionally, potential increased temperatures and decreased
precipitation caused by climate change may impact water quality.
However, since the time of listing in 1986, the JSRIP partnership has
implemented the following recovery actions: (1) 13,000 acre-ft of
permanent water for instream flows are secured to benefit the June
sucker; (2) a mechanism for annually recommending and providing flows
for June sucker spawning was implemented; (3) the common carp
population was suppressed, resulting in measurable habitat improvement
in Utah Lake; (4) the impacts of urbanization are being considered
through active research and planning; (5) a landscape-scale stream
channel and delta restoration for the Provo River is being implemented;
and (6) future water quality and availability are actively being
studied and prioritized by the JSRIP, UDWQ, and the Utah Lake
Commission (see Recovery, above). We find that the severity of these
threats has decreased since the time of listing; adaptive management of
these threats is ongoing, and increased resiliency and redundancy are
evident as indicated by increasing survival rates and overall
population numbers.
Commercial Fishing
Commercial fishing, including fishing for June suckers, was
historically an important use of Utah Lake (Heckman et al. 1981, p. 9).
Some commercial fishing for June suckers occurred through the 1970s,
but on a very limited basis. Shortly thereafter, commercial harvest for
the species largely stopped due to the limited population size.
Currently, the June sucker is a prohibited species and cannot be
harvested (Utah Administrative Code R657-14-8). Consequently,
commercial or recreational fishing is no longer considered a threat to
the species. Regulated collections of June suckers for scientific
purposes occur at a very limited level, but do not pose a threat to the
species at the population level.
Disease
Neither disease nor the presence of parasites were considered
threats to the June sucker at the time of listing (51 FR 10851; March
31, 1986). Although parasites likely exist in June sucker habitat,
there is no evidence that June suckers at the individual or population
levels are compromised by the presence of parasites. Fish health
inspections are regularly conducted on June suckers at the FES hatchery
and in Red Butte Reservoir, and no known pathogens have been detected
(JSRIP 2018c, entire). At this time, the best available information
does not indicate that the presence of parasites or disease negatively
affects the June sucker.
Predation by Nonnative Fishes
Predation by nonnative fishes poses a threat to the successful
recruitment of young suckers into the spawning adult life stage (Radant
and Hickman 1984, p. 6) and was a major factor for listing the June
sucker as endangered (51 FR 10851; March 31, 1986). The introduction of
predatory nonnative fishes significantly altered the native Utah Lake
fish assemblage. Historically, Bonneville cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus
clarkii) was the top-level piscivore (fish-eating predator) in Utah
Lake; however, 30 fish species have been introduced since the late
1800s. Twelve nonnative fish species have established self-sustaining
populations, and seven of these are piscivorous (SWCA 2002, p. 14). As
a result, June suckers face an array of predator species, including
white bass (Morone chrysops), walleye (Sander vitreus), largemouth bass
(Micropterus salmoides), black crappie (Pomoxis nigromaculatus), black
bullhead (Ameiurus melas), northern pike (Esox lucius), and channel
catfish (Ictalurus punctatus).
Predation by nonnative fishes primarily targets the early life
stages of June suckers. Adult June suckers are larger than the gape
size of the average predatory fish and, therefore, are significantly
less vulnerable. At the time of listing, the effects of predation were
exacerbated by the lack of vegetated refuge habitat within Utah Lake.
White bass may have the highest potential to limit recruitment of
young suckers into the spawning adult population (SWCA 2002, p. 132;
Landom et al. 2010, p. 18). White bass become piscivorous at age-0 in
Utah Lake (Radant and Sakaguchi 1981, p. 12; Landom et al. 2010, pp.
11-12) and are the most abundant piscivore (UDWR 2010, p. 9). The white
bass population in Utah Lake could consume as many as 550 million fish
of various species throughout the course of 1 year (Landom et al. 2010,
pp. 8-10). However, it appears that restored habitat with complex
aquatic vegetation provides the June sucker with effective refuge from
white bass. Thus, habitat restoration is likely paramount to young-of-
year June sucker resiliency and survival (see Recovery, above).
The recent illegal introduction of northern pike in Utah Lake
raises concerns similar to white bass. Northern pike predominantly feed
on juvenile fish; predation on adults is less than 1 percent (Reynolds
and Gaeta 2017, p. 12). Thus far, the number of northern pike in the
lake has not measurably increased, and active removal efforts continue
to suppress populations (Reynolds and Gaeta 2017, p. 13). However, a
northern pike population model shows potential for a high degree of
population increase with potential for a high negative impact on the
June sucker population by the year 2040 (Gaeta et al. 2018, entire).
Despite these modeling results, unique factors impacting northern pike
population dynamics in Utah Lake are still not understood. Recent
habitat improvements in the lake from common carp removal (see
Recovery, above) may help mitigate northern pike predation by providing
refugia for June suckers. Additionally, high levels of total dissolved
solids (TDS), such as those found in Utah Lake, may suppress northern
pike spawning and development (Scannell and Jacobs 2001, entire; Koel
2011, p. 7). The JSRIP is funding research to clarify this
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relationship and to determine a course of action to prevent northern
pike from becoming a greater threat to June sucker in the future.
While predation from nonnative species remains a threat, spawning
populations of June suckers and the number of untagged fish (e.g.,
possibly natural recruitment) are increasing. Adaptive management of
nonnative fish is ongoing.
In addition to nonnative predatory fishes, avian predation on June
suckers has been documented and primarily occurs when stocked June
suckers are first released into the lake (Goldsmith et al., p. 12).
Predation is primarily from pelicans, and the amount varies based on
location of release, time of year, and time of day of the June sucker
release (Goldsmith et al., p. 12). When possible, staff releasing
stocked fish into Utah Lake drive off waiting pelicans, and do releases
in the fall and at night, when predation is lowest (UDWR 2017, p. 3).
The best available information does not indicate that pelicans or other
avian predators are a threat to June suckers once the fish are
established in Utah Lake.
Existing Regulatory Mechanisms
Under this factor, we examine the stressors identified within the
other factors as ameliorated or exacerbated by any existing regulatory
mechanisms or conservation efforts. Section 4(b)(1)(A) of the Act
requires that the Service take into account those efforts, if any,
being made by any State or foreign nation, or any political subdivision
of a State or foreign nation, to protect endangered or threatened
species. We consider relevant Federal, State, and Tribal laws,
regulations, and other such binding legal mechanisms that may
ameliorate or exacerbate any of the threats we describe in threat
analyses under the other four factors or otherwise enhance the species'
conservation. Our consideration of these mechanisms is described below.
As a listed species, the primary regulatory mechanism for
protection of the June sucker is through section 9(a) of the Act, as
administered by the Service, which broadly prohibits import, export,
take (e.g., to harm, harass, kill, capture), and possession of the
species. Additional regulatory mechanisms are provided through section
7(a)(2) of the Act, which states that each Federal agency shall, in
consultation with and with the assistance of the Secretary, insure that
any action authorized, funded, or carried out by the agency is not
likely to jeopardize the continued existence of any endangered species
or threatened species or result in the destruction or adverse
modification of habitat of such species that is determined by the
Secretary, after soliciting comments from affected States, counties,
and equivalent jurisdictions, to be critical. Section 10(a)(1)(A) of
the Act provides a mechanism for research and propagation of listed
species for recovery purposes through a permitting system that allows
incidental take of a listed species in the course of scientific
projects that will benefit the species as a whole. For non-Federal
actions, section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Act authorizes the Service to issue
a permit allowing take of species provided that the taking is
incidental to, and not the purpose of, the carrying out of an otherwise
lawful activity. Section 10(a)(2)(A) of the Act requires that a
conservation plan, which is part of an application for an incidental
take permit, describe the impact of the taking and identify steps to
minimize and mitigate the impacts.
The Act will continue to provide protection to the June sucker
after downlisting to threatened status, for as long as it remains on
the List. The June sucker and its habitat will also continue to receive
consideration and protection through the other regulatory mechanisms
discussed below.
The NEPA requires Federal agencies to evaluate the potential
effects of their proposed actions on the quality of the human
environment and requires the preparation of an EIS whenever projects
may result in significant impacts. Federal agencies must identify
adverse environmental impacts of their proposed actions and develop
alternatives that undergo the scrutiny of other public and private
organizations as a part of their decision-making process. However,
impacts may still occur under NEPA, and the implementation of
conservation measures is largely voluntary. Actions evaluated under
NEPA only affect the June sucker if they address potential impacts to
the species or its habitat.
The Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act (16 U.S.C. 661 et seq.)
requires that Federal agencies sponsoring, funding, or permitting
activities related to water resource development projects request
review of these actions by the Service and the State natural resources
management agency. Similar to caveats noted for NEPA, actions
considered under the Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act are only
relevant if they potentially impact the species or its habitat. The
Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act does not provide strong or broad
protections for listed species, but it provides an additional layer of
review for projects likely to impact the June sucker and works in
concert with other regulatory mechanisms.
Section 101(a) of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (i.e.,
Clean Water Act; 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.) states that the objective of
this law is to restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and
biological integrity of the Nation's waters and provide the means to
assure protection of fish and wildlife. This statute contributes to the
protection of the June sucker through provisions for water quality
standards, protection from the discharge of harmful pollutants and
contaminants (sections 303(c), 304(a), and 402), and protection from
the discharge of dredged or fill material into all waters, including
certain wetlands (section 404).
The Clean Water Act requires every State to establish and maintain
water quality standards designed to protect, restore, and preserve
water quality in the State. However, Utah Lake has failed to meet water
quality standards due to exceedance of total phosphorus and TDS
concentrations (Psomas 2007, p. 11), and it is listed as a section
303(d) ``impaired'' water (Utah Lake Commission 2018, p. 7). Poor water
quality in Utah Lake could alter food availability for the June sucker
and contribute to increases in harmful algal bloom events and toxin
concentrations from those events, which could increase the risk of
large-scale June sucker mortality events. To meet Clean Water Act
requirements, the UDWQ and the Utah Lake Commission are studying water
quality in Utah Lake. They have a steering committee and science panel
for the purposes of providing recommendations to improve water quality
standards in Utah Lake (Utah Lake Commission 2018, entire).
June suckers receive some protections at the State level. Under
Utah Administrative Code R657-14-8, June suckers may not be harvested,
and if caught must be immediately returned alive and unharmed to the
water from which they were taken.
When this rule is effective (see DATES, above), the June sucker
will continue to receive protection under the Act as a threatened
species. The June sucker will also continue to receive protection under
the other aforementioned regulatory mechanisms. Despite these existing
regulatory mechanisms, the threats discussed under the other factors
continue to affect the June sucker such that it now meets the
definition of a threatened species rather than an endangered species.
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Cumulative Threats
The June sucker faces threats primarily from degraded habitat and
water quality, water availability, predation from nonnative species,
and urbanization. Furthermore, existing regulatory mechanisms do not
adequately address these threats. The June sucker also faces a future
threat of climate change, which may exacerbate other existing threats.
These factors may act cumulatively on the species. For example,
urbanization can result in increased pressure on existing water
resources as well as degraded water quality, which, when combined with
rising temperatures and decreased rainfall, can result in less
available water, increased water temperatures, and decreased habitat
quality. These factors can cause reduced availability of food for the
June sucker, decreased reproductive success, and increased mortality.
However, since the time of listing (51 FR 10851; March 31, 1986),
all of the identified threats to the June sucker have either improved
measurably or are being adaptively managed according to the best
available scientific information for the benefit of the June sucker
(see Recovery, above). Conservation measures, including establishing
refuge populations, stocking of June suckers in Utah Lake, habitat
restoration projects on spawning tributaries, and nonnative fish
removal, have resulted in increased numbers of June suckers in the
lake, evidence of wild reproduction, and improved habitat within the
lake and its tributaries. As a result, resiliency, redundancy, and
representation have all improved. Continued research and monitoring
provide an avenue to respond to new and evolving threats, such as the
effects of climate change, to recovery progress. The existence of
refuge populations ensures that, should a stochastic event or extreme
combination of existing threats greatly impact the population in Utah
Lake, the June sucker would not become extinct.
This resilience to the cumulative threats is due largely to the
actions of an active, committed, and well-funded recovery partnership.
The JSRIP is the driving force behind the reduction in threats, habitat
improvement, and population augmentation, and the JSRIP is able to
adaptively manage new stressors as they arise. The improvement of
conditions and success of the JSRIP can be measured via the increased
number of spawning June suckers, the positive population trend, and the
high level of year-to-year survival.
Summary of Comments and Recommendations
In the proposed rule published in the Federal Register on November
26, 2019 (84 FR 65080), we requested that all interested parties submit
written comments on our proposal to downlist the June sucker by January
27, 2020. We also contacted appropriate Federal and State agencies,
scientific experts and organizations, and other interested parties and
invited them to comment on the proposal. Newspaper notices inviting
general public comment were published in the Salt Tribune (Salt Lake
City) and Daily Herald (Provo). We did not receive any requests for a
public hearing. All substantive information provided during the comment
period is either incorporated directly into this final rule or is
addressed below.
Peer Reviewer Comments
In accordance with our joint policy on peer review published on
July 1, 1994 (59 FR 34270) and our August 22, 2016, memorandum (USFWS
2016, entire) updating and clarifying the role of peer review of
listing actions under the Act, we solicited expert opinion from three
knowledgeable individuals with scientific expertise and familiarity
with the June sucker, its habitat, its biological needs and potential
threats, or principles of conservation biology. The purpose of peer
review is to ensure that our listing and reclassification
determinations are based on scientifically sound data, assumptions, and
analyses. We received responses from two peer reviewers.
We reviewed all comments we received from the peer reviewers for
substantive issues and new information regarding the proposed
downlisting of the June sucker. The peer reviewers provided additional
information, clarifications, and suggestions to improve the final rule,
which we include in this rule or address in the responses to comments
below. One peer reviewer favored the downlisting of the June sucker and
provided only small, technical edits to the document. The other peer
reviewer also provided technical edits and suggestions. This reviewer
also expressed concern that there was not enough detail in the proposed
rule to determine whether June sucker meets the definition of a
threatened species, and stated that many of the known threats should be
more thoroughly mitigated before downlisting should be considered.
Substantive comments from this reviewer are addressed below, and minor
editorial comments were resolved in the text of the rule itself.
(1) Comment: The reviewer suggested that there may be additional
information that could contribute to the accuracy and completeness of
our description and analysis of the biology, habitat, population
trends, and historical and current distribution of the June sucker. The
reviewer stated there is quantitative information on population
dynamics and trends that was not considered in the proposed rule.
Our Response: The reviewer did not specify what information may be
missing from the rule or provide information on population dynamics and
trends that we failed to consider. We were unable to find additional
population or biological information about the June sucker that we had
not reviewed when the proposed rule was published. Some additional
information has become available since publication of the proposed
rule, and it is included in the text of this rule where relevant.
(2) Comment: The reviewer commented that we referred the reader to
the final listing rule and recovery plan, respectively published in
1986 and 1999, but that these documents are relatively old, and
substantial new information has accrued since their appearance, which
we reference later.
Our Response: The final listing rule (51 FR 10851; March 31, 1986)
and the recovery plan (Service 1999) represent the only two Service-
published documents with significant information on the biology and
habitat of the June sucker, until the proposed rule was published in
2019 (84 FR 65080; November 26, 2019). We referenced the older
documents in the proposed rule because the proposed rule itself also
served as the 5-year review and our most recent update to those
documents. As the reviewer notes, many other and more recent references
are available for additional information and are cited in the text of
both the proposed and final rules.
(3) Comment: The reviewer stated that we did not adequately
consider some of the threats to June sucker in our analysis,
particularly predation by white bass on juvenile June suckers, avian
predation, and the reliance on hatchery-produced fish to maintain the
population, as natural reproduction and recruitment are not sufficient.
The reviewer did not provide any additional information to support
these comments.
Our Response: The November 26, 2019, proposed rule (84 FR 65080),
as well as this final rule, recognize that the June sucker currently
relies on stocking to maintain the population in Utah Lake. We do not
find this reliance to be in conflict with a ``threatened'' status
determination, as we have reasonable
[[Page 205]]
certainty based on partner agreements that stocking will continue until
the Utah Lake population can be shown to be self-sustaining. Continued
and planned recovery actions, such as habitat restoration and removal
of nonnative species, are likely to continue to have a positive effect
on reproduction, recruitment, and survival, and the system is monitored
intensely to detect any rising threats or reversal of recovery
progress. As we discuss above in this final rule, the best available
information does not indicate that white bass or avian predation
constitute a threat to the June sucker in Utah Lake under current
conditions (which include ongoing recovery actions, like stocking and
nonnative fish removal). Some predation does occur, and we have added
text regarding methods used to reduce pelican predation on June suckers
while they are being stocked, as that is the time the largest number of
fish are vulnerable to avian predation. If, in the future, these
factors are shown to prevent the June sucker population in Utah Lake
from being self-sustaining, they will need to be addressed before we
can achieve full recovery.
(4) Comment: The reviewer stated that we assume that capture of
untagged fish or fish of ``unknown origin'' results in population
estimates and other demographic parameters that are incorrect (low),
but adds that a population estimate does not depend on tagged fish only
and the estimate should include the total number of fish, tagged and
untagged.
Our Response: The reviewer is correct. The number we present as the
known spawning population is not meant to represent a population
estimate, but to provide the number of recorded individual June sucker
spawners detected using PIT tags and antennae. That number is the
minimum number of spawning adults we can be certain are surviving in
the lake, and it does not account for fish that did not spawn in the
years analyzed, fish without tags, or tagged fish that were not
recorded by monitoring equipment. Due to the lack of information
regarding untagged fish or Utah Lake fish that are not spawning, and
the various ways the data have been collected, we do not attempt to
extrapolate the number of recorded spawning June suckers into a full
population estimate. We have removed all references to a population
estimate in this document and clarified the nature of the numbers
provided.
(5) Comment: The reviewer stated that we have not shown adequately
that recovery criteria are met in order to allow for a downlisting, and
cited the need for actions such as permanent, legally assured flows for
spawning, increased habitat, and a permanent continuous plan to remove
carp and combat future novel predators that may be introduced.
Our Response: The Recovery discussion in the proposed rule (84 FR
65080, November 26, 2019, pp. 84 FR 65084-65087), as well as in this
final rule (above), goes into detail regarding the existing downlisting
criteria and how they have been met (if they have) or why they are
outdated or irrelevant.
The legal standard for downlisting is whether the species meets the
definition of a ``threatened species'' that is, it is likely to become
an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a
significant portion of its range. Due to an exceptional track record
and proven recovery measures, we are assured that the commitment of our
partners and the JSRIP will continue, recovery actions and responses to
threats will be implemented, and the existing agreements mean that June
sucker is no longer currently in danger of extinction through all or a
significant portion of its range. The reviewer's comments regarding
downlisting criteria more closely represent the definition of full
recovery and delisting than for downlisting the species to threatened
status.
(6) Comment: The reviewer commented that we did not include all
necessary and pertinent information to support our arguments, and they
identified a number of references for June sucker that we did not cite
in our proposed rule that were found through an internet search. The
reviewer did not state that these particular references had information
that would impact our status evaluation; in fact, the reviewer said
that they had not read them. The reviewer only stated that they
believed the fact that they could find references we did not cite meant
we had not been thorough in our analysis.
Our Response: The literature cited in the proposed rule (84 FR
65080; November 26, 2019) constitutes the best scientific and
commercial information available regarding the downlisting of the June
sucker. Additional literature, including all of the citations provided
by the reviewer, were previously evaluated as part of the rule
development, and they remain on file as part of the record. A
significant amount of literature on the June sucker and Utah Lake
exists, some of which is outdated or redundant. Some was not necessary
to include, as it provides a level of detail on aspects of June sucker
biology that was superfluous to reaching a status determination. For
the sake of clarity and brevity, we did not cite every existing piece
of literature on the species, but limited our citations to the best
scientific and commercial information available regarding the status
of, and threats to, the June sucker. However, no piece of literature
that we found might have bearing on our analysis, either positively or
negatively, was excluded from our review, including the citations
provided by the commenter.
Public Comments
We received 19 letters from the public that provided comments on
our November 26, 2019, proposed rule (84 FR 65080). Twelve of the
commenters expressed their explicit support for the proposed
downlisting, and three expressed their opposition to it. Four
commenters either did not explicitly state their position or expressed
general concerns that threats should be addressed if the June sucker is
to be downlisted. Relevant and substantive public comments that have
not been addressed through changes to the text are addressed in the
following summary.
(1) Comment: One commenter objected to the proposed downlisting on
the basis that too many threats to the species (including climate
change and carp) still exist to justify reduced protections, and stated
that increased human development inevitably results in death or
extinction of animals in the area.
Our Response: We agree that a number of threats still impact the
June sucker and need to be continually managed for the species'
protection and recovery. This rule analyzes adaptive measures for all
known threats, including water management plans and habitat restoration
to mitigate the effects of climate change; long-term management plans
for carp and other nonnative, invasive species; and protections that
prevent future development from increasing the June sucker's risk of
becoming endangered again. All exceptions from take restrictions
included in the 4(d) rule, as described below under Provisions of the
4(d) Rule, are tied directly to the benefit of June sucker recovery and
the health of its native habitat. We are confident in the JSRIP's and
our partners' commitment to following through with existing plans and
continuing to manage the June sucker in accordance with recovery
objectives, as they have for the last 18 years. Should threats to the
June sucker increase to the point where there is an increased risk of
extinction, the Service can and will reevaluate its status and
protections accordingly.
[[Page 206]]
(2) Comment: One commenter suggested removing all June suckers and
other desirable native fishes from Utah Lake to a safe holding
facility, exterminating the nonnative species, and then reintroducing
native species back into the lake.
Our Response: This comment does not relate to the status of June
sucker now, but to potential ways to continue recovery in the future.
However, due to the size of Utah Lake and unique hydrological factors,
removal of all nonnative fishes from the system, even using strong
piscicides, is not feasible. Mechanical removal is not able to capture
all nonnative fish at a rate that would prevent reestablishment, and
suitable piscicides are not available in enough quantity to eradicate
all nonnative fish from the lake, even if a practical and comprehensive
application method could be found.
(3) Comment: One commenter requested that we update the June sucker
recovery plan in order to specify what needs to be done to reach full
recovery and delisting.
Our Response: An update of the June sucker recovery plan, including
quantitative delisting criteria, is underway, and a draft will be
published for public comment at a later date, after this rule goes into
effect (see DATES, above).
(4) Comment: We received several comments requesting that
provisions be added to the 4(d) rule regarding State management of
recreational fisheries of Utah Lake and for education and outreach
efforts for June sucker and Utah Lake. In addition to official public
comments, both of these provisions were also informally requested by
recovery partners at JSRIP meetings.
Our Response: We have added the requested provisions to the final
4(d) rule; both provisions will contribute to June sucker conservation.
Summary of Changes From the Proposed Rule
As explained above under Summary of Comments and Recommendations,
we made several changes in this final rule in response to public
comments we received on our November 26, 2019, proposed rule (84 FR
65080). The primary changes are to add exceptions to the prohibitions
on take in the 4(d) rule for recreational fisheries management and for
education and outreach. See ``Recreational Fisheries Management'' and
``Education and Outreach,'' under Provisions of the 4(d) Rule, below,
for a description of these take exceptions. These changes address
requests made both in public comments and by our recovery partners at
JSRIP meetings.
Additionally, in response to a peer-review comment, in this final
rule, we do not attempt to extrapolate the number of recorded spawning
June suckers into a full population estimate; we have removed all
references to a population estimate in this document and clarified the
nature of the numbers provided. We also cite more recent information
(published since the November 26, 2019, publication of the proposed
rule), where it is relevant, in this final rule.
Finally, we made nonsubstantive, editorial changes, such as to
explain a cross-reference to other regulations, to the text of the 4(d)
rule to improve its clarity.
Determination of June Sucker's Status
Section 4 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1533) and its implementing
regulations (50 CFR part 424) set forth the procedures for determining
whether a species meets the definition of ``endangered species'' or
``threatened species.'' The Act defines an ``endangered species'' as a
species that is ``in danger of extinction throughout all or a
significant portion of its range,'' and a ``threatened species'' as a
species that is ``likely to become an endangered species within the
foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its
range.'' The Act requires that we determine whether a species meets the
definition of ``endangered species'' or ``threatened species'' because
of any of the following factors: (A) The present or threatened
destruction, modification, or curtailment of its habitat or range; (B)
overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or
educational purposes; (C) disease or predation; (D) the inadequacy of
existing regulatory mechanisms; or (E) other natural or manmade factors
affecting its continued existence.
As required by the Act, we considered the five factors in assessing
whether the June sucker is an endangered or threatened species
throughout all of its range. We carefully examined the best scientific
and commercial information available regarding the past, present, and
future threats faced by the June sucker. We reviewed the information
available in our files and other available published and unpublished
information, and we consulted with recognized experts and State
agencies. We evaluated the changes in resiliency, redundancy, and
representation for the June sucker since the time of listing (51 FR
10851; March 31, 1986).
June sucker resiliency has improved since the time of listing, with
an increase in the wild spawning population of at least ten-fold, a
positive population trend, and increases in both the quality and
quantity of habitat. We project that these conditions will continue to
improve based on plans to continue successful management actions and
implement new projects, such as the PRDRP and the Utah Water Quality
Study. Redundancy in June sucker is assured by the existence of two new
populations, including the refuge population maintained at FES hatchery
and an additional naturally self-sustaining population in Red Butte
Reservoir, as well as the presence of water flows in at least two
spawning tributaries each year (Provo River and Hobble Creek), with up
to five spawning tributaries available in good water years. Prior to
the June sucker's listing, there were no refuge populations, and in low
water years, there might be no available spawning tributaries with
water throughout the summer. Representation for the June sucker exists
in the form of genetic diversity in the breeding and stocking program,
which has preserved a high degree of genetic variation in the fish
stocked in Utah Lake since listing. Based on these elements, we find
that overall viability for the June sucker has improved since the time
of listing.
Factor B is not considered a threat to the June sucker due to the
fact that harvest and collection of the species are strictly regulated
and very limited. June suckers are affected by loss and degradation of
habitat (Factor A), predation (Factor C), and other effects of human
activities, including climate change (Factor E). Existing regulatory
mechanisms outside of the Act (Factor D) do not address all the
identified threats to the June sucker, as indicated by the fact that
these threats continue to affect the species throughout its range.
However, recovery actions have significantly improved viability of the
June sucker and reduced the immediacy of these threats.
Status Throughout All of Its Range
After evaluating threats to the species and assessing the
cumulative effects of the threats under the section 4(a)(1) factors, we
find that the threats of loss and degradation of habitat (Factor A),
predation (Factor C), and other effects of human activities including
climate change (Factor E) are still acting on the June sucker. Existing
regulatory mechanisms outside of the Act (Factor D) do not address all
the identified threats to the June sucker, as indicated by the fact
that these threats continue to affect the species throughout its range,
although with less intensity than at the time of listing (51 FR 10851;
March 31,
[[Page 207]]
1986). However, given increases in population numbers due to sustained
recovery efforts by the JSRIP over the last 18 years, we determine the
June sucker no longer meets the Act's definition of an endangered
species. We therefore proceed with determining whether the June sucker
meets the Act's definition of a threatened species.
Based solely on biological factors, we consider 25 years to be the
foreseeable future within which we can reasonably determine that the
future threats and the June sucker's response to those threats is
likely. This time period includes multiple generations of the species
and allows adequate time for impacts from conservation efforts or
changes in threats to be indicated through population response.
The foreseeable future for the individual threats vary. Management
and recovery progress of the population and its threats are overseen by
the JSRIP. The charter of this program states that the purpose of the
JSRIP is to recover the June sucker to the point at which it no longer
requires protections under the Act, and to do so based on recovery
guidance provided by the Service using the best available scientific
and biological information in an adaptive management approach. Because
the JSRIP is committed to achieving recovery and the partners have
committed to continued funding, threats to the June sucker will
continue to be adaptively managed by the JSRIP until such time as we
find it no longer requires protections under the Act. For at least as
long as the species remains listed, the JSRIP will continue to manage
June sucker threats and population health and trends in an adaptive
way, ensuring that the species is extremely unlikely to go extinct. The
Service will then rely on management actions that have been put in
place by the JSRIP, and other factors such as a population viability
analysis, habitat improvements, and future long-term agreements, when
delisting is being considered. This long-term management (e.g.,
permanent water acquisition, breeding program, stocking, and nonnative
fish removal) ensures continued stability in the absence of the
protections of the Act after the June sucker reaches full recovery.
Although population numbers have increased and the intensity of the
identified threats have decreased, our analysis indicates that, because
of the remaining threats and stressors, the species meets the Act's
definition of a threatened species. Thus, after assessing the best
available information, we conclude that the June sucker is not
currently in danger of extinction, but is still likely to become
endangered within the foreseeable future throughout all of its range.
Status Throughout a Significant Portion of Its Range
Under the Act and our implementing regulations, a species may
warrant listing if it is in danger of extinction or likely to become so
in the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of
its range. The court in Center for Biological Diversity v. Everson,
2020 WL 437289 (D.D.C. Jan. 28, 2020) (Center for Biological
Diversity), vacated the aspect of the Final Policy on Interpretation of
the Phrase ``Significant Portion of Its Range'' in the Endangered
Species Act's Definitions of ``Endangered Species'' and ``Threatened
Species'' (79 FR 37578; July 1, 2014) that provided that the Services
do not undertake an analysis of significant portions of a species'
range if the species warrants listing as threatened throughout all of
its range. Therefore, we proceed to evaluating whether the species is
endangered in a significant portion of its range--that is, whether
there is any portion of the species' range for which both (1) the
portion is significant; and, (2) the species is in danger of extinction
in that portion. Depending on the case, it might be more efficient for
us to address the ``significance'' question or the ``status'' question
first. We can choose to address either question first. Regardless of
which question we address first, if we reach a negative answer with
respect to the first question that we address, we do not need to
evaluate the other question for that portion of the species' range.
Following the court's holding in Center for Biological Diversity,
we now consider whether there are any significant portions of the
species' range where the species is in danger of extinction now (i.e.,
endangered). In undertaking this analysis for the June sucker, we
choose to address the status question first--we consider information
pertaining to the geographic distribution of both the species and the
threats that the species faces to identify any portions of the range
where the species is endangered.
The June sucker is a narrow endemic that functions as a single,
contiguous population and occurs within a small area that includes one
lake and associated tributaries. Thus, there is no biologically
meaningful way to break this limited range into portions, and the
threats that the species faces affect the species throughout its entire
range. This means that no portions of the species' range have a
different status from its rangewide status. Therefore, no portion of
the species' range can provide a basis for determining that the species
is in danger of extinction in a significant portion of its range, and
we determine that the species is likely to become in danger of
extinction within the foreseeable future throughout all of its range.
This is consistent with the courts' holdings in Desert Survivors v.
Department of the Interior, No. 16-cv-01165-JCS, 2018 WL 4053447 (N.D.
Cal. Aug. 24, 2018), and Center for Biological Diversity v. Jewell, 248
F. Supp. 3d, 946, 959 (D. Ariz. 2017).
Determination of Status
Our review of the best available scientific and commercial
information indicates that the June sucker does not meet the definition
of an endangered species in accordance with sections 3(6) and 4(a)(1)
of the Act, but does meet the definition of a threatened species in
accordance with sections 3(20) and 4(a)(1) of the Act. Therefore, we
are downlisting the June sucker in the List of Endangered and
Threatened Wildlife from endangered to threatened.
It is our policy, as published in the Federal Register on July 1,
1994 (59 FR 34272), to identify to the maximum extent practicable at
the time a species is classified, those activities that would or would
not constitute a violation of section 9 of the Act. The intent of this
policy is to increase public awareness of the effect of a listing on
proposed and ongoing activities within the range of the species being
listed. Because we are listing this species as a threatened species,
the prohibitions in section 9 would not apply directly. We are
therefore putting into place below a set of regulations to provide for
the conservation of the species in accordance with section 4(d), which
also authorizes us to apply any of the prohibitions in section 9 to a
threatened species. The 4(d) rule, which includes a description of the
kinds of activities that would or would not constitute a violation,
complies with this policy.
Final Rule Issued Under Section 4(d) of the Act
Background
Section 4(d) of the Act contains two sentences. The first sentence
states that the ``Secretary shall issue such regulations as he deems
necessary and advisable to provide for the conservation'' of species
listed as threatened. The U.S. Supreme Court has noted that statutory
language like ``necessary and advisable'' demonstrates a large degree
of deference to the agency (see Webster v. Doe, 486 U.S. 592 (1988)).
Conservation is defined in the
[[Page 208]]
Act to mean ``the use of all methods and procedures which are necessary
to bring any endangered species or threatened species to the point at
which the measures provided pursuant to [the Act] are no longer
necessary.'' Additionally, the second sentence of section 4(d) of the
Act states that the Secretary ``may by regulation prohibit with respect
to any threatened species any act prohibited under section 9(a)(1), in
the case of fish or wildlife, or section 9(a)(2), in the case of
plants.'' Thus, the combination of the two sentences of section 4(d)
provides the Secretary with wide latitude of discretion to select and
promulgate appropriate regulations tailored to the specific
conservation needs of the threatened species. The second sentence
grants particularly broad discretion to us when adopting the
prohibitions under section 9.
The courts have recognized the extent of the Secretary's discretion
under this standard to develop rules that are appropriate for the
conservation of a species. For example, courts have upheld rules
developed under section 4(d) as a valid exercise of agency authority
where they prohibited take of threatened wildlife, or include a limited
taking prohibition (see Alsea Valley Alliance v. Lautenbacher, 2007
U.S. Dist. Lexis 60203 (D. Or. 2007); Washington Environmental Council
v. National Marine Fisheries Service, 2002 U.S. Dist. Lexis 5432 (W.D.
Wash. 2002)). Courts have also upheld 4(d) rules that do not address
all of the threats a species faces (see State of Louisiana v. Verity,
853 F.2d 322 (5th Cir. 1988)). As noted in the legislative history when
the Act was initially enacted, ``once an animal is on the threatened
list, the Secretary has an almost infinite number of options available
to him with regard to the permitted activities for those species. He
may, for example, permit taking, but not importation of such species,
or he may choose to forbid both taking and importation but allow the
transportation of such species'' (H.R. Rep. No. 412, 93rd Cong., 1st
Sess. 1973).
Exercising this authority under section 4(d), we have developed a
species-specific 4(d) rule that is designed to address the June
sucker's specific threats and conservation needs. Although the statute
does not require us to make a ``necessary and advisable'' finding with
respect to the adoption of specific prohibitions under section 9, we
find that this rule as a whole satisfies the requirement in section
4(d) of the Act to issue regulations deemed necessary and advisable to
provide for the conservation of the June sucker. As discussed under
Summary of Factors Affecting the Species, we conclude that the June
sucker is no longer at risk of extinction, but is still likely to
become so in the foreseeable future, primarily due to the identified
threats of water development, habitat degradation, and the introduction
of nonnative species. The provisions of this 4(d) rule promote
conservation of the June sucker by encouraging management of the Utah
Lake system in ways that meet the conservation needs of the June sucker
while taking into consideration the stakeholders' needs. The provisions
in this rule are some of many regulatory tools that we will use to
promote the conservation of the June sucker.
Provisions of the 4(d) Rule
This 4(d) rule provides for the conservation of the June sucker by
prohibiting the following activities, with certain exceptions
(discussed below): Importing or exporting; possession and other acts
with unlawfully taken specimens; delivering, receiving, transporting,
or shipping in interstate or foreign commerce in the course of
commercial activity; and selling or offering for sale in interstate or
foreign commerce. In addition, anyone taking, attempting to take, or
otherwise possessing a June sucker, or parts thereof, in violation of
section 9 of the Act will be subject to a penalty under section 11 of
the Act, with certain exceptions (discussed below). Under section 7 of
the Act, Federal agencies must continue to ensure that any actions they
authorize, fund, or carry out are not likely to jeopardize the
continued existence of the June sucker.
Under the Act, ``take'' means to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot,
wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect, or to attempt to engage in any
such conduct. Some of these provisions have been further defined in
regulations at 50 CFR 17.3. Take can result knowingly or otherwise, by
direct and indirect impacts, intentionally or incidentally. Allowing
incidental and intentional take in certain cases, such as for the
purposes of scientific inquiry, monitoring, or to improve habitat or
water availability and quality, would help preserve a species'
remaining populations, slow their rate of decline, and decrease
synergistic, negative effects from other stressors.
We may issue permits to carry out otherwise prohibited activities,
including those described above, involving threatened wildlife under
certain circumstances. Regulations governing permits are codified at 50
CFR 17.32. With regard to threatened wildlife, a permit may be issued
for the following purposes: For scientific purposes, to enhance
propagation or survival, for economic hardship, for zoological
exhibition, for educational purposes, for incidental taking, or for
special purposes consistent with the purposes of the Act. There are
also certain statutory exemptions from the prohibitions, which are
found in sections 9 and 10 of the Act.
We recognize the special and unique relationship with our State
natural resource agency partners in contributing to conservation of
listed species. State agencies often possess scientific data and
valuable expertise on the status and distribution of endangered,
threatened, and candidate species of wildlife and plants. State
agencies, because of their authorities and their close working
relationships with local governments and landowners, are in a unique
position to assist us in implementing all aspects of the Act. In this
regard, section 6 of the Act provides that we shall cooperate to the
maximum extent practicable with the States in carrying out programs
authorized by the Act. Therefore, any qualified employee or agent of a
State conservation agency that is a party to a cooperative agreement
with us in accordance with section 6(c) of the Act, who is designated
by his or her agency for such purposes, will be able to conduct
activities designed to conserve the June sucker that may result in
otherwise prohibited take without additional authorization.
As discussed above under Summary of Factors Affecting the Species,
nonnative species, water development, and habitat degradation affect
the status of the June sucker. A range of conservation activities,
therefore, have the potential to benefit the June sucker, including
nonnative fish removal, habitat restoration projects, monitoring of
June sucker, management of recreational fisheries, June sucker research
projects, educational and outreach efforts, and maintenance of June
sucker refuges and stocking programs. Accordingly, this 4(d) rule
addresses activities to facilitate conservation and management of the
June sucker where they currently occur and may occur in the future by
excepting them from the Act's take prohibition under certain specific
conditions. These activities are intended to increase management
flexibility and encourage support for the conservation and habitat
improvement of the June sucker. Under this 4(d) rule, take will
continue to be prohibited, except for actions allowed in this 4(d)
rule, provided the actions are approved by the Service, in coordination
with any existing designated recovery program (e.g., JSRIP), for the
purpose of June
[[Page 209]]
sucker conservation or recovery. Approval must be in writing (by letter
or email) from a Service biologist or supervisor with authority over
June sucker decisions. Take is allowed under this 4(d) rule as follows,
and is further described below:
Incidental take resulting from activities intended to
reduce or eliminate nonnative fish, including, but not limited to,
common carp, northern pike, and white bass, from Utah Lake or its
tributaries.
Incidental take resulting from habitat restoration
projects or projects that allow for the increase of instream flows in
Utah Lake tributaries, such as diversion removals.
Incidental take resulting from monitoring of June sucker
in Utah Lake and its tributaries.
Incidental take resulting from monitoring and management
of recreational sportfish populations in Utah Lake and its tributaries.
Incidental and direct take resulting from research
projects to study factors affecting June sucker or its habitat for the
purposes of providing management recommendations or improved condition
of June sucker.
Incidental and direct take resulting from educational or
outreach efforts to increase public awareness, engagement, and support
for June sucker recovery efforts.
Incidental and direct take resulting from maintaining June
sucker refuges and stocking population, and from moving June sucker for
the purposes of stocking them in Utah Lake.
These forms of allowable take are explained in more detail below.
For all forms of allowable take, reasonable care must be practiced to
minimize the impacts from the actions. Reasonable care means limiting
the impacts to June sucker individuals and populations by complying
with all applicable Federal, State, and Tribal regulations for the
activity in question; using methods and techniques that result in the
least harm, injury, or death, as feasible; undertaking activities at
the least impactful times (e.g., conducting activities that might
impact spawning habitat in a tributary only after spawning is concluded
for the year) and locations, as feasible; procuring and implementing
technical assistance from a qualified biologist on projects regarding
all methods prior to the implementation of those methods; ensuring the
number of individuals removed or sampled minimally impacts the existing
wild population; ensuring no disease or parasites are introduced into
the existing June sucker population; and preserving the genetic
diversity of wild populations.
Nonnative Fish Removal
Incidental take is allowed where it results from activities
intended to reduce or eliminate nonnative fish, including, but not
limited to, common carp, northern pike, and white bass, from Utah Lake
or its tributaries. Control of nonnative fish is vital for the
continued recovery of June sucker. Control of nonnative fish is
primarily conducted with mechanical removal via commercial seine
netting and, to a limited extent, through angling (for northern pike).
Other methods, including the use of genetically modified nonnative fish
and electrofishing to reduce existing populations, may be implemented
in the future.
This 4(d) rule defines nonnative fish removal as any action with
the primary or secondary purpose (such as the introduction of
genetically engineered nonnative fish as part of an elimination
strategy) of removing nonnative fish from Utah Lake and its tributaries
that compete with, predate upon, or degrade the habitat of the June
sucker. These removal methods must be approved by the Service in
writing (by letter or email), in coordination with an existing
designated recovery program (e.g., JSRIP) for that purpose. Such
methods may include, but are not limited to, mechanical removal,
chemical treatments such as piscicides, or biological controls. All
methods used must be in compliance with State and Federal regulations.
Whenever possible, June suckers that are caught alive as part of
nonnative fish removal should be returned to their source as quickly as
possible.
Habitat Restoration and Improvement of Instream Flows
Incidental take resulting from habitat restoration projects or
projects that increase instream flows in Utah Lake tributaries is
allowed under this 4(d) rule. Habitat restoration projects are needed
to provide additional spawning and rearing habitat and refugia for June
sucker. Improvements in the ability to obtain and deliver water to any
of the known spawning tributaries will allow for improved spawning
conditions, entrainment of June sucker larvae for development, and
periodic high flows providing scouring of spawning habitats. This 4(d)
rule defines habitat restoration or water delivery improvement projects
as any action with the primary or secondary purpose of improving
habitat conditions in Utah Lake and its tributaries or improving water
delivery and available instream flows in spawning tributaries. These
projects must be approved by the Service in writing, in coordination
with any existing designated recovery program, for that purpose.
Examples of planned or suggested projects where incidental take is
allowed to occur include the Provo River Delta Restoration Project and
the removal of water diversion structures from the Provo River and
Hobble Creek.
June Sucker Monitoring
This 4(d) rule allows incidental take associated with any method
used to detect June suckers in the wild for the purposes of better
understanding population numbers, trends, or response to stressors that
is not intended to be destructive, but that may unintentionally cause
harm or death. Monitoring of June suckers is vital to understanding the
population dynamics, health, and trends; for measuring the success of
the stocking program; for evaluating impacts from threats; and for
evaluating recovery actions that address threats to the species. With
the use of PIT tag technology, monitoring is becoming less disruptive
to the June sucker. However, many monitoring methods, including the
initial PIT tagging of individuals, may accidentally harm fish or
result in death. In addition to PIT tag readers, methods that may be
used to detect June suckers in the wild include trammel netting,
spotlighting, minnow trapping, trap netting, gill-netting,
electrofishing, and seining. Any monitoring activities not conducted by
the State or under the State's section 6 permit must be approved by the
Service in writing and be conducted in coordination with any existing
designated recovery program.
Recreational Fisheries Management
Recreational fisheries monitoring actions conducted by the State
are allowed to cause incidental take of June suckers through this 4(d)
rule, provided that, whenever possible, June suckers that are caught
alive as part of recreational fisheries are returned to their source as
quickly as possible. These activities do not include fishing or other
recreational activities conducted by private individuals but only those
conducted by the State to manage fisheries in Utah Lake. Covered
activities are those that do not occur in June sucker spawning habitat
during the season of use or rearing habitat at any time of year, and
are designed to count or capture recreational sport fish only.
According to the interagency ``Policy for Conserving Species Listed or
Proposed for Listing Under the Endangered Species Act While Providing
and Enhancing Recreational Fisheries
[[Page 210]]
Opportunities'' published in the Federal Register on June 3, 1996 (61
FR 27978), the Service will support management practices that are
consistent with recovery objectives and compatible with existing
recreational fisheries. Management of recreational fishing
opportunities undertaken by the State, or its designated agent, on Utah
Lake and its tributaries require regular monitoring of sport fish
populations. Methods that may be used to monitor sport fish populations
include trammel netting, spotlighting, trawling, minnow trapping, trap
netting, gill-netting, electrofishing, and seining. Use of these
methods may inadvertently result in the capture, and incidental take,
of individual June Sucker. Any activities associated with recreational
fisheries management that are likely to significantly or repeatedly
impact June suckers, such as those in spawning habitat during the
season of use, those in the rearing habitat any time of year, or those
that use methods not targeted to count or capture recreational sport
fish only, must be approved by the Service in writing (by letter or
email) and conducted in coordination with any existing recovery program
in order to minimize effects on the population.
Research
This 4(d) rule defines June sucker research allowed to cause take
as any activity undertaken for the purposes of increasing our
understanding of June sucker biology, ecology, or recovery needs under
the auspices of UDWR, a recognized academic institution, or a qualified
scientific contractor and approved by the Service in writing, in
coordination with any existing designated recovery program, as a
necessary and productive study for June sucker recovery. Additional
research is needed on June sucker biology, ecology, habitat needs,
predators, and response to threats in order to improve the species'
status and provide recommendations for population management, habitat
improvement, and threat reduction. Research may involve capture of June
suckers using methods described above, or a variety of other activities
to study water quality, nonnative fishes, lake and riverine ecosystems,
tributary flows, habitat, or other factors affecting June suckers that
may impact individual fish inadvertently. In some cases, lethal
sampling of June suckers for research purposes may be necessary and
appropriate.
Education and Outreach
This 4(d) rule defines June sucker educational and outreach actions
allowed to cause take as any activity undertaken for the purposes of
increasing public awareness of June sucker biology, ecology, or
recovery needs and their positive effects on Utah Lake and its
tributaries (e.g., a June sucker rearing-and-release program for high
school students or a live June sucker display at an outreach event).
These activities must be approved by the Service in writing (by letter
or email), in coordination with any existing designated recovery
program (e.g., JSRIP), as activities likely to benefit June sucker
conservation through increased public awareness and engagement, which
support June sucker recovery.
Education and outreach are a vital part of June sucker recovery
progress. Public awareness of June sucker biology and ecology helps
foster support for the recovery program's activities in and around Utah
Lake. Increasing the prevailing understanding of how recovery
activities for June suckers improve the health, function, beauty, and
quality of Utah Lake for sport fishers, recreationists, and the
surrounding community will strengthen support for continued
conservation of the fish. It will also serve to counteract common and
incorrect narratives that the protection of the June sucker is
responsible for preventing positive activities and development in and
around Utah Lake. This is particularly important during the upcoming
PRDRP construction, in order to tie the recovery of the fish to
meaningful improvements in ecological conditions and amenities for the
public at Utah Lake.
Refuges and Stocking
This 4(d) rule defines June sucker stocking and refuge maintenance
as any activity undertaken for the long-term maintenance of the June
sucker at facilities outside of Utah Lake and its tributaries or for
the production of June suckers for stocking in Utah Lake. Take could
occur from necessary facility maintenance or water management,
including at Red Butte Reservoir and its downstream drainages. Any
breeding, stocking, or refuge program must be approved by the Service
in writing, in coordination with any existing designated recovery
program. Any June sucker breeding program shall be in compliance with
all applicable regulations and best hatchery and fishery management
practices as described in the American Fisheries Society's Fish
Hatchery Management (Wedemeyer 2002).
Maintaining refuge populations and stocking the June sucker in Utah
Lake is an integral part of June sucker recovery. The process of
breeding, rearing, growing, maintaining, and stocking June suckers may
result in take at all life stages, but the benefits to the species far
outweigh any losses. At the present time, one facility (FES hatchery)
breeds the June sucker for stocking in Utah Lake; this facility also
functions as the designated refuge population for June sucker. In
addition to the hatchery, FES uses offsite ponds as a grow-out facility
to allow fish to reach a larger size before they are stocked in Utah
Lake because this significantly increases survival upon release (Burgad
et al. 2016, p. 8). Another population of June suckers exists in Red
Butte Reservoir and is maintained, but not actively managed as a
refuge, for stocking purposes. Red Butte Reservoir is a useful source
population and may be used for stocking more intensively in the future,
since fish from Red Butte Reservoir consistently have the highest post-
stocking success rates.
Nothing in this 4(d) rule changes in any way the recovery planning
provisions of section 4(f) of the Act, the consultation requirements
under section 7 of the Act, or our ability to enter into partnerships
for the management and protection of the June sucker. However,
interagency cooperation may be further streamlined through planned
programmatic consultations for the species between us and other Federal
agencies, where appropriate.
Required Determinations
National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.)
We have determined that environmental assessments and EISs, as
defined under the authority of the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), need not be prepared in connection with
determining a species' listing status under the Endangered Species Act.
In an October 25, 1983, notice in the Federal Register (48 FR 49244),
we outlined our reasons for this determination, which included a
compelling recommendation from the Council on Environmental Quality
that we cease preparing environmental assessments or environmental
impact statements for listing decisions.
Government-to-Government Relationship With Tribes
In accordance with the President's memorandum of April 29, 1994,
(Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal
Governments; 59 FR 22951), Executive Order 13175 (Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal
[[Page 211]]
Governments), and the Department of the Interior's manual at 512 DM 2,
we readily acknowledge our responsibility to communicate meaningfully
with recognized Federal Tribes on a government-to-government basis. In
accordance with Secretarial Order 3206 of June 5, 1997 (American Indian
Tribal Rights, Federal-Tribal Trust Responsibilities, and the
Endangered Species Act), we readily acknowledge our responsibilities to
work directly with Tribes in developing programs for healthy
ecosystems, to acknowledge that tribal lands are not subject to the
same controls as Federal public lands, to remain sensitive to Indian
culture, and to make information available to Tribes. We have
determined that no Tribes will be affected by this rule because there
are no Tribal lands or interests within or adjacent to June sucker
habitat.
References Cited
A complete list of all references cited in this final rule is
available at https://www.regulations.gov at Docket No. FWS-R6-ES-2019-
0026, or upon request from the Utah Ecological Services Field Office
(see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
Authors
The primary authors of this final rule are staff members of the
Service's Regions 5 and 7 and the Utah Ecological Services Field Office
(see ADDRESSES and FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 17
Endangered and threatened species, Exports, Imports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Transportation.
Regulation Promulgation
Accordingly, we hereby amend part 17, subchapter B of chapter I,
title 50 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as follows:
PART 17--ENDANGERED AND THREATENED WILDLIFE AND PLANTS
0
1. The authority citation for part 17 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1361-1407; 1531-1544; and 4201-4245, unless
otherwise noted.
0
2. Amend Sec. 17.11(h) by revising the entry for ``Sucker, June
(Chasmistes liorus)'' under ``FISHES'' in the List of Endangered and
Threatened Wildlife to read as follows:
Sec. 17.11 Endangered and threatened wildlife.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Listing citations
Common name Scientific name Where listed Status and applicable
rules
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Fishes
* * * * * * *
Sucker, June..................... Chasmistes liorus.. Wherever found..... T 51 FR 10851, 3/31/
1986; 85 FR
[insert Federal
Register page
where the document
begins], 1/4/2021;
50 CFR 17.44(cc)
\4d\; 50 CFR
17.95(e).\CH\
* * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
3. Amend Sec. 17.44 by adding paragraph (cc) to read as follows:
Sec. 17.44 Special rules--fishes.
* * * * *
(cc) June sucker (Chasmistes liorus).
(1) Prohibitions. The following prohibitions that apply to
endangered wildlife also apply to the June sucker. Except as provided
under paragraph (cc)(2) of this section and Sec. Sec. 17.4 and 17.5,
it is unlawful for any person subject to the jurisdiction of the United
States to commit, to attempt to commit, to solicit another to commit,
or cause to be committed, any of the following acts in regard to this
species:
(i) Import or export, as set forth at Sec. 17.21(b) for endangered
wildlife.
(ii) Take, as set forth at Sec. 17.21(c)(1) for endangered
wildlife.
(iii) Possession and other acts with unlawfully taken specimens, as
set forth at Sec. 17.21(d)(1) for endangered wildlife.
(iv) Interstate or foreign commerce in the course of commercial
activity, as set forth at Sec. 17.21(e) for endangered wildlife.
(v) Sale or offer for sale, as set forth at Sec. 17.21(f) for
endangered wildlife.
(2) Exceptions from prohibitions. In regard to this species, you
may:
(i) Conduct activities as authorized by an existing permit under
Sec. 17.32.
(ii) Conduct activities as authorized by a permit issued prior to
February 3, 2021 under Sec. 17.22 for the duration of the permit.
(iii) Take, as set forth at Sec. 17.21(c)(2) through (c)(4) for
endangered wildlife.
(iv) Take, as set forth at Sec. 17.31(b).
(v) Take June suckers while carrying out the following legally
conducted activities in accordance with this paragraph (cc)(2)(iv):
(A) Definitions. For the purposes of this paragraph (cc)(2)(iv):
(1) Qualified biologist means a full-time fish biologist or aquatic
resources manager employed by Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, a
Department of the Interior agency, or fish biologist or aquatic
resource manager employed by a private consulting firm that has been
approved by the Service in writing (by letter or email), the designated
recovery program (e.g., June Sucker Recovery Implementation Program),
or the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources.
(2) Reasonable care means limiting the impacts to June sucker
individuals and populations by complying with all applicable Federal,
State, and Tribal regulations for the activity in question; using
methods and techniques that result in the least harm, injury, or death,
as feasible; undertaking activities at the least impactful times and
locations, as feasible; procuring and implementing technical assistance
from a qualified biologist on projects regarding all methods prior to
the implementation of those methods; ensuring the number of individuals
removed or sampled minimally impacts the existing wild population;
ensuring no disease or parasites are introduced into the existing June
sucker population; and
[[Page 212]]
preserving the genetic diversity of wild populations.
(B) Allowable forms of take of June suckers. Take of June suckers
as a result of the following legally conducted activities is allowed,
provided that the activity is approved by the Service in writing (by
letter or email), in coordination with any existing designated recovery
program, for the purpose of the conservation or recovery of the June
sucker, and that reasonable care is practiced to minimize the impact of
such activities.
(1) Nonnative fish removal. Take of June suckers as a result of any
action with the primary or secondary purpose of removing from Utah Lake
and its tributaries nonnative fish that compete with, predate upon, or
degrade the habitat of the June sucker is allowed. Allowable methods of
removal may include, but are not limited to, mechanical removal,
chemical treatments, or biological controls. Whenever possible, June
suckers that are caught alive as part of nonnative fish removal should
be returned to their source as quickly as possible.
(2) Habitat restoration and improvement of instream flows. Take of
June suckers as a result of any action with the primary or secondary
purpose of improving habitat conditions in Utah Lake and its
tributaries or improving water delivery and available in-stream flows
in spawning tributaries is allowed.
(3) Monitoring. Take of June suckers as a result of any method that
is used to detect June suckers in the wild to better understand
population numbers, trends, or response to stressors, and that is not
intended to be destructive but that may unintentionally cause harm or
death, is allowed.
(4) Recreational fisheries management. Take of June suckers as a
result of any activity by the State, or its designated agent, that is
necessary to manage or monitor recreational fisheries in Utah Lake and
its tributaries is allowed, provided the management practices do not
contradict June sucker recovery objectives and that the activities are
not intended to cause harm or death to June suckers.
(5) Research. Take of June suckers as a result of any activity
undertaken for the purposes of increasing scientific understanding of
June sucker biology, ecology, or recovery needs under the auspices of
the designated recovery program, a recognized academic institution, or
a qualified scientific contractor is allowed. Incidental and direct
take resulting from such approved research to benefit the June sucker
is allowed.
(6) Education and outreach. Take of June suckers as a result of any
activity undertaken under the auspices of the designated recovery
program for the purposes of increasing public awareness of June sucker
biology, ecology, or recovery needs and June sucker recovery benefits
for Utah Lake, its tributaries, and the surrounding communities is
allowed. Incidental and direct take resulting from such educational or
outreach efforts to benefit the June sucker is allowed.
(7) Refuges and stocking. Take of June suckers as a result of
activities undertaken for the long-term maintenance of June suckers at
Service-approved facilities outside of Utah Lake and its tributaries or
for the production of June suckers for stocking in Utah Lake is
allowed.
(vi) Possess and engage in other acts with unlawfully taken
endangered wildlife, as set forth at Sec. 17.21(d)(2).
Aurelia Skipwith
Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2020-27833 Filed 12-31-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4333-15-P