Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to U.S. Navy Mole Pier South Berth Floating Dry Dock Project, 68575-68586 [2023-21920]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 4, 2023 / Notices
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: September 28, 2023.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–21913 Filed 9–29–23; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[RTID 0648–XD398]
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to
Specified Activities; Taking Marine
Mammals Incidental to U.S. Navy Mole
Pier South Berth Floating Dry Dock
Project
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; issuance of an incidental
harassment authorization.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
regulations implementing the Marine
Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) as
amended, notification is hereby given
that NMFS has issued an incidental
harassment authorization (IHA) to the
U.S. Navy to incidentally harass marine
mammals during construction
associated with Mole Pier Floating Dry
Dock project at Naval Base San Diego.
DATES: This Authorization is effective
from March 1, 2024 through February
28, 2025.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the
application and supporting documents,
as well as a list of the references cited
in this document, may be obtained
online at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/incidentaltake-authorizations-constructionactivities. In case of problems accessing
these documents, please call the contact
listed below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Steven Tucker, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427–8401.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
Background
The MMPA prohibits the ‘‘take’’ of
marine mammals, with certain
exceptions. Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and
(D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et
seq.) direct the Secretary of Commerce
(as delegated to NMFS) to allow, upon
request, the incidental, but not
intentional, taking of small numbers of
marine mammals by U.S. citizens who
engage in a specified activity (other than
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commercial fishing) within a specified
geographical region if certain findings
are made and either regulations are
proposed or, if the taking is limited to
harassment, a notice of a proposed IHA
is provided to the public for review.
Authorization for incidental takings
shall be granted if NMFS finds that the
taking will have a negligible impact on
the species or stock(s) and will not have
an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for
taking for subsistence uses (where
relevant). Further, NMFS must prescribe
the permissible methods of taking and
other ‘‘means of effecting the least
practicable adverse impact’’ on the
affected species or stocks and their
habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of
similar significance, and on the
availability of the species or stocks for
taking for certain subsistence uses
(referred to in shorthand as
‘‘mitigation’’); and requirements
pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring
and reporting of the takings are set forth.
The definitions of all applicable MMPA
statutory terms cited above are included
in the relevant sections below.
Summary of Request
On February 16, 2022, NMFS received
a request from the U.S. Navy, Navy Base
San Diego (or, the Navy) for an IHA to
take marine mammals incidental to
Mole Pier Floating Dry Dock project in
south-central San Diego Bay. The
application was deemed adequate and
complete on May 1, 2023. The Navy’s
request is for authorization to
incidentally take California sea lions,
harbor seals, and bottlenose dolphins,
by Level B harassment only. Neither the
U.S. Navy nor NMFS expect serious
injury or mortality to result from this
activity and, therefore, an IHA is
appropriate.
NMFS previously issued an IHA to
the U.S. Navy for similar work (87 FR
65578, October 31, 2022). The U.S. Navy
has complied with all the requirements
(e.g., mitigation, monitoring, and
reporting) of the previous IHA, and
information regarding their monitoring
results is publicly available at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/incidentaltake-authorizations-constructionactivities.
Description of Activity
Overview
The U.S. Navy request is associated
with demolition and construction
activities related to partial demolition
and construction of a floating dry dock
and related facilities at Mole Pier, Navy
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68575
Base San Diego. The purpose of the
Mole Pier South Berth Floating Dry
Dock (FDD) Project is to overcome
current shortfall in dry dock availability
for repair and maintenance of vessels at
Navy Base San Diego. The planned
activity remedies some of the
constraints resulting from aging or
obsolete facilities.
Activities that may result in Level B
harassment include removal of existing
piles and installation of new piles to
support facilities that are necessary for
repair and maintenance of vessels in
furtherance of the U.S. Navy’s
Congressionally mandated
responsibilities under 10 U.S.C. 5062.
The specified activity also includes
dredging and demolition of the existing
deck at the mooring wharf, installation
of mooring attachments, installation of a
steel floating dry dock and construction
of a ramp and pier. Demolition activities
include vibratory removal or clipping of
up to fifty-four 24 x 24-inch square
concrete piles and seven 24-inch
octagonal concrete piles. Pile driving
and extraction activities will take place
during 33 days of in-water work at the
Mole Pier mooring wharf and the ramp.
The Test Pile Program (TPP) described
in the notice of proposed authorization
(88 FR 47111, July 21, 2023) will not be
undertaken. Permanent pile
installations, expected to occur via
impact hammer and/or jetting, consist of
eighty 24-inch octagonal concrete piles
at the mooring wharf and twenty-one
24-inch octagonal piles for the Ramp
Pier and access to the FDD.
Dates and Duration
The U.S. Navy requested that the IHA
be effective for a period of 1 year, from
March 1, 2024 through February 28,
2025. During this period, the Navy
expects to complete the pile driving and
removal portions of the project during
59 workdays that may be nonconsecutive, with all in-water activities
conducted during daylight hours. Pile
driving and removal activities may
occur at any time during the proposed
1-year period of effectiveness.
Specific Geographic Region
The activities would occur in the
south-central portion of San Diego Bay.
San Diego Bay (the Bay) is a narrow,
crescent-shaped natural embayment
oriented northwest-southeast with an
approximate length of 24 kilometers
(km) and a total area of roughly 4 km2
(11,000 acres; Port of San Diego, 2007).
The width of the Bay ranges from 300
meters to 5.800 meters and depths range
from 23 meters Mean Lower Low Water
(MLLW) near the tip of Ballast Point to
less than 1.2 meters at the southern end
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 4, 2023 / Notices
(Merkel and Associates, Inc., 2009).
Approximately half of the Bay is less
than 4.5 meters deep and much of it is
less than 15 meters deep (Merkel and
Associates, Inc., 2009). The northern
and central portions of the Bay have
been shaped by historical dredging and
filling to support large ship navigation
and shoreline development. The United
States Army Corps of Engineers dredges
the main navigation channel in the Bay
to maintain a depth of 14 meters MLLW
and is responsible for providing safe
transit for private, commercial, and
military vessels within the bay (NOAA,
2012). Outside of the navigation
channel, the bay floor consists of
platforms at depths that vary slightly
(Merkel and Associates, Inc., 2009).
Within the Central Bay, typical depths
range from 10.7–11.6 meters MLLW to
support large ship turning and
anchorage, and small vessel marinas are
typically dredged to depths of 4.6
meters MLLW (Merkel and Associates,
Inc., 2009).
San Diego Bay is heavily used by
commercial, recreational, and military
vessels, with an average of 82,413 vessel
movements (in or out of the Bay) per
year (approximately 225 vessel transits
per day), a majority of which are
presumed to occur during daylight
hours. This number of transits does not
include recreational boaters that use San
Diego Bay, estimated to number 200,000
annually (San Diego Harbor Safety
Committee, 2009). Background
(ambient) noise in the south-central San
Diego Bay averaged 126 decibels (dB) re:
1 micropascal (mPa) in 2019 (Dahl and
Dall’Osto, 2019). Therefore, noise from
non-impulsive sources associated with
the specified activities is assumed to
become indistinguishable from
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background noise as it diminishes to
126 dB with distance from the source
(Dahl and Dall’Osto, 2019).
Detailed Description of the Specified
Activity
The proposed FDD installation and
associated dredging activities would
occur within San Diego Bay at the south
berth of the Mole Pier, which is located
approximately 1.6 km (1 mile) south of
the main entrance gate to Navy Base San
Diego (NBSD), immediately south of
Pier 8 and the Paleta Creek Channel,
and north of Pier 10.
The Mole Pier floating dry dock
project includes the following phases:
(1) Relocation of the USS Curtiss and
hoteling facilities that are currently
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moored along the south berth of the
Mole Pier;
(2) Dredging at the Mole Pier FDD
sump, approaches, and turning basin to
increase water-depths as well as
subsequent sediment disposal activities;
(3) Partial demolition of the existing
decking at the mooring wharf;
(4) Installation of mooring
attachments and upgrades at the
mooring wharf;
(5) Demolition of existing Ramp Pier;
(6) Utility modifications;
(7) Placement and operation of a steel
FDD; and
(8) Construction of a new Ramp Pier
with vehicle access bridge from the
quay wall southeast of the 1 Mole Pier
to the FDD.
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Figure 1 -- Project Location
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TABLE 1—PROPOSED (PARENTHESES) AND REVISED (BOLD) PILE ACTIVITIES
Pile location
Pile extraction method 1
Pile size/type
Demolition (Pile Extraction)
Mooring Wharf ...................................................
Total
estimated
days
Number
of piles
1
Ramp Pier ..........................................................
TPP (Cancelled/withdrawn) ...............................
24-inch Square Concrete .....................
24-inch Octagonal Concrete ................
24-inch Square Concrete .....................
N/A .......................................................
—Hydraulic Pile Clipper .......................
—Vibratory Extraction ..........................
—High-pressure Water Jetting ............
Total Piles Removed ..................................
..............................................................
..............................................................
Construction (Pile
Piles/
day
5
3 (24)
(5)
(2)
(6)
(6)
24
7
(28) 29
(6) 0
3 (7)
(1) 0
I ............ I
(65) 60
I
5
2
6
0
(19) 13
Installation) 2
TPP (Cancelled/withdrawn) ...............................
Mooring Wharf ...................................................
Ramp Pier & Intermediate Support Structure ...
24-inch Octagonal Concrete ................
—Impact Hammer ................................
—High-pressure Water Jetting ............
(1) 0
(3) 3
(0) 0
(80) 48
(21) 12
(0) 0
(27) 16
(7) 4
Total Piles Installed ....................................
..............................................................
..............................................................
............
(107) 60
(40) 20
..............................................................
..............................................................
............
................
(59) 33
Total In-Water Pile Extraction/Installation Days.
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Notes:
1 While other methods of pile extraction are possible, cutting off the piles at mudline is the most likely method that will be used to extract piles though vibratory extraction equipment could be used if conditions warrant. No Level A/B take analysis conducted on the other pile extraction methods.
2 Impact pile installation is the most likely method that will be used to install piles. High-pressure water jetting may be used either separately from, or at the same
time as, impact pile installation.
3 The removal of the piles at the Mooring Wharf are dependent on interferences during the installation of new piles. The anticipated quantity of removed piles is
small and will not exceed the listed values.
Underwater demolition activities
covered under this IHA application
would occur over a period of 13 days at
two primary locations: (1) the Mole Pier
mooring wharf and (2) the Ramp Pier.
Piles at the mooring wharf will only be
removed if they obstruct installation of
new piles. All of the piles that support
the Ramp Pier are slated for removal
and replacement in the course of
constructing a new replacement pier. At
both locations, the concrete pier deck
would be saw cut longitudinally and
transversely at mid-span of every bent,
allowing for removal in large but
manageable sections, with weights of
less than 50 tons (45 metric tons). While
the section is rigged to the derrick crane,
a hydraulic shearing tool attached to a
barge-mounted excavator would be used
to cut the piles just below pile cap.
Once freed from the piles, the sections
would be set onto a barge. Following the
removal of the pier deck, the piles could
be removed via multiple methods,
including vibratory extraction, highpressure water jetting, hydraulic pile
clipper, wire saw, underwater chain
saw, dead pull or via a combination of
methods. Up to fifty-four 24-by-24-inch
square concrete piles and seven 24-inch
octagonal concrete piles would be
removed from the area of the existing
mooring wharf and the Ramp Pier.
Any of the pile extraction activities
cited above may occur as part of the
Project-related activities. However,
given that the methods other than
vibratory pile extraction entail lower
source levels, we assume that take will
not result. Vibratory pile driving is the
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only demolition-related activity
expected to potentially result in
incidental Level B harassment and
subsequent take of marine mammals.
Pile installation activities would
require 33 days. Similar to pile
extraction activities, pile installation
activities for the Project are broken up
into separate phases: (1) installation of
forty-eight 24-inch octagonal concrete
piles at the mooring wharf; and (2)
installation of twelve 24-inch octagonal
concrete piles associated with the Ramp
Pier and Intermediate Support Structure
for personnel and vehicle access to the
FDD. Piles installed for the mooring
wharf and the Ramp Pier/Intermediate
Support Structure would occur via an
impact pile driver, high-pressure water
jetting, or a combination of both
methods. Vibratory pile installation is
not expected.
The relocation of assets, dredging and
sediment disposal, utility modifications,
above-water demolition activities, and
placement and operation of the FDD
does not have the potential to result in
harassment under the MMPA.
Underwater sound associated with pile
extraction and installation would have
the potential to harass marine mammals.
The demolition and construction
elements analyzed in the IHA are
described below and would occur over
33 days of in-water work over the 1 year
period of authorization.
Mitigation, monitoring, and reporting
measures are described in detail later in
this document (please see Mitigation
and Monitoring and Reporting).
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Comments and Responses
A notice of NMFS’ proposal to issue
an IHA to the Navy was published in
the Federal Register on July 21, 2023
(88 FR 47111). That notice described, in
detail, the Navy’s activities, the marine
mammal species that may be affected by
the activities, and the anticipated effects
on marine mammals. In that notice, we
requested public input on the request
for authorization described therein, our
analyses, the proposed authorization,
and any other aspect of the notice of
proposed IHA, and requested that
interested persons submit relevant
information, suggestions, and
comments. This proposed notice was
available for a 30-day public comment
period. NMFS received no public
comments.
Changes From the Proposed IHA to
Final IHA
The Navy provided information about
additional changes to project design and
implementation, foregoing the six-pile
Test Pile Program described in the
proposed IHA Federal Register notice.
After further review, the Navy now
expects most piles to be removed by
clipping them at the mud line, rather
than vibratory extraction. In addition,
the total number of construction piles to
be installed has been reduced from 107
to 60 and the number of piles slated for
removal has been revised downward
from 65 to 60. There will be a
commensurate reduction in in-water
workdays, from 59 to 33. Pile types,
methods of removal and installation and
project footprint are otherwise
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 4, 2023 / Notices
unchanged. Due to the possibility of
further adjustments to construction of
the project, the Navy requests that the
take estimates cited in the proposed IHA
carry forward, and NMFS concurs with
this request. There are no other changes.
Therefore, NMFS has determined that
the project changes do not affect the
preliminary small numbers finding or
negligible impact determination.
Description of Marine Mammals in the
Area of Specified Activities
The request provides information
about marine mammals that are known
to occur in the broader geographic
region including near the mouth of San
Diego Bay and North Bay. Based on
monitoring of prior projects conducted
at Navy Base San Diego and in the
vicinity of the FDD project, three of the
species discussed are most likely to
occur in the project area: California sea
lions, bottlenose dolphins, and harbor
seals.
Sections 3 and 4 of the application
summarize available information
regarding status and trends, distribution
and habitat preferences, and behavior
and life history of the potentially
affected species. NMFS fully considered
all of this information, and we refer the
reader to these descriptions, instead of
reprinting the information. Additional
information regarding population trends
and threats may be found in NMFS’
Stock Assessment Reports (SARs;
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
national/marine-mammal-protection/
marine-mammal-stock-assessments)
and more general information about
these species (e.g., physical and
behavioral descriptions) may be found
on NMFS’ website (https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/find-species).
Table 2 lists all species or stocks for
which take is expected and proposed to
be authorized for this activity, and
summarizes information related to the
population or stock, including
regulatory status under the MMPA and
Endangered Species Act (ESA) and
Potential Biological Removal (PBR),
where known. PBR is defined by the
MMPA as the maximum number of
animals, not including natural
mortalities, that may be removed from a
marine mammal stock while allowing
that stock to reach or maintain its
optimum sustainable population (as
described in NMFS’ SARs). While no
serious injury or mortality is anticipated
or proposed to be authorized here, PBR
and annual serious injury and mortality
from anthropogenic sources are
included here as gross indicators of the
status of the species or stocks and other
threats.
Marine mammal abundance estimates
presented in the table represent the total
number of individuals that make up a
given stock. NMFS’ stock abundance
estimates for most species represent the
total estimate of individuals within the
geographic area, if known, that
comprises that stock. All managed
stocks in this region are assessed in
NMFS’ U.S. Pacific SARs. All values
presented in Table 2 are the most recent
available at the time of publication and
are available online at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/marinemammal-stock-assessments.
TABLE 2—MARINE MAMMAL SPECIES LIKELY IMPACTED BY THE SPECIFIED ACTIVITIES 1
Common name
Scientific name
Stock
I
ESA/
MMPA
status;
strategic
(Y/N) 2
I
Stock abundance
(CV, Nmin, most recent
abundance survey) 3
Annual
M/SI 4
PBR
I
I
Odontoceti (toothed whales, dolphins, and porpoises)
Family Delphinidae
Bottlenose dolphin .....................
Tursiops truncatus ....................
California coastal ......................
N
453 ..................................
2.7
>2.0
Order Carnivora—Pinnipedia
Family Otariidae (eared seals and sea lions)
California Sea Lion ....................
Zalophus californianus ..............
United States ............................
N
257,606 ...........................
14,011
>321
Phoca vitulina ...........................
California ...................................
N
30,968 .............................
1,641
43
Family Phocidae (earless seals)
Harbor seal ................................
1 Information
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on the classification of marine mammal species can be found on the web page for The Society for Marine Mammalogy’s Committee on Taxonomy
(https://marinemammalscience.org/science-and-publications/list-marine-mammal-species-subspecies/; Committee on Taxonomy (2022)).
2 Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (-) indicates that the species is not listed under the
ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality exceeds PBR or
which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed under the ESA is automatically
designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
3 NMFS marine mammal stock assessment reports online at: www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/. CV is coefficient of variation, N
min is the minimum estimate of stock
abundance. In some cases, CV is not applicable.
4 These values, found in NMFS’s SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g., commercial fisheries, vessel strike). Annual M/SI often cannot be determined precisely and is in some cases presented as a minimum value or range. A CV associated with estimated mortality due to commercial fisheries is presented in some cases.
As indicated above, the 3 species in
Table 2 temporally and spatially cooccur with the activity to the degree that
take is reasonably likely to occur. Based
on many years of observations and
numerous Navy-funded surveys in San
Diego Bay (Merkel and Associates, Inc.,
2008; Sorensen and Swope, 2010;
Graham and Saunders, 2014; Tierra Data
Inc., 2016), other marine mammals
rarely occur south of the Coronado Bay
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Bridge, are not known to occur near
Naval Base San Diego, and any
occurrence in the project area would be
very rare. Therefore, while common
dolphins (Delphinus delphis and
Delphinus capensis), and gray whales
(Eschrictius robustus) have been sighted
in North Bay and reported near the
mouth of San Diego Bay respectively
(Naval Facilities Engineering Command,
Southwest and Port of San Diego Bay,
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2013), they are not anticipated to occur
in the project area and no take of these
species is anticipated or proposed to be
authorized.
Marine Mammal Hearing
Hearing is the most important sensory
modality for marine mammals
underwater, and exposure to
anthropogenic sound can have
deleterious effects. To appropriately
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assess the potential effects of exposure
to sound, it is necessary to understand
the frequency ranges marine mammals
are able to hear. Not all marine mammal
species have equal hearing capabilities
(e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok
and Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings,
2008). To reflect this, Southall et al.
(2007, 2019) recommended that marine
mammals be divided into hearing
groups based on directly measured
(behavioral or auditory evoked potential
techniques) or estimated hearing ranges
(behavioral response data, anatomical
modeling, etc.). Note that no direct
measurements of hearing ability have
been successfully completed for
mysticetes (i.e., low-frequency
cetaceans). Subsequently, NMFS (2018)
described generalized hearing ranges for
these marine mammal hearing groups.
Generalized hearing ranges were chosen
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based on the approximately 65 decibel
(dB) threshold from the normalized
composite audiograms, with the
exception for lower limits for lowfrequency cetaceans where the lower
bound was deemed to be biologically
implausible and the lower bound from
Southall et al. (2007) retained. Marine
mammal hearing groups and their
associated hearing ranges are provided
in Table 3.
TABLE 3—MARINE MAMMAL HEARING GROUPS
[NMFS, 2018]
Generalized hearing
range *
Hearing group
Low-frequency (LF) cetaceans (baleen whales) .....................................................................................................................
Mid-frequency (MF) cetaceans (dolphins, toothed whales, beaked whales, bottlenose whales) ...........................................
High-frequency (HF) cetaceans (true porpoises, Kogia, river dolphins, Cephalorhynchid, Lagenorhynchus cruciger & L.
australis).
Phocid pinnipeds (PW) (underwater) (true seals) ...................................................................................................................
Otariid pinnipeds (OW) (underwater) (sea lions and fur seals) ..............................................................................................
7 Hz to 35 kHz.
150 Hz to 160 kHz.
275 Hz to 160 kHz.
50 Hz to 86 kHz.
60 Hz to 39 kHz.
* Represents the generalized hearing range for the entire group as a composite (i.e., all species within the group), where individual species’
hearing ranges are typically not as broad. Generalized hearing range chosen based on ∼65 dB threshold from normalized composite audiogram,
with the exception for lower limits for LF cetaceans (Southall et al., 2007) and PW pinniped (approximation).
The pinniped functional hearing
group was modified from Southall et al.
(2007) on the basis of data indicating
that phocid species have consistently
demonstrated an extended frequency
range of hearing compared to otariids,
especially in the higher frequency range
(Hemila¨ et al., 2006; Kastelein et al.,
2009; Reichmuth and Holt, 2013).
For more detail concerning these
groups and associated frequency ranges,
please see NMFS (2018) for a review of
available information.
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Potential Effects of Specified Activities
on Marine Mammals and Their Habitat
The effects of underwater noise from
the Navy’s construction activities have
the potential to result in behavioral
harassment of marine mammals in the
vicinity of the project area. The notice
of the proposed IHA (88 FR 47111, July
21, 2023) included a discussion of the
effects of anthropogenic noise on marine
mammals and the potential effects of
underwater noise from the Navy’s
construction activities on marine
mammals and their habitat. That
information and analysis was
considered in these final IHA
determinations and is not repeated here;
please refer to the Federal Register
notice of proposed IHA (88 FR 47111,
July 21, 2023).
Estimated Take of Marine Mammals
This section provides an estimate of
the number of incidental takes
authorized through the IHA, which will
inform both NMFS’ consideration of
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‘‘small numbers,’’ and the negligible
impact determinations.
Harassment is the only type of take
expected to result from these activities.
Except with respect to certain activities
not pertinent here, section 3(18) of the
MMPA defines ‘‘harassment’’ as any act
of pursuit, torment, or annoyance,
which (i) has the potential to injure a
marine mammal or marine mammal
stock in the wild (Level A harassment);
or (ii) has the potential to disturb a
marine mammal or marine mammal
stock in the wild by causing disruption
of behavioral patterns, including, but
not limited to, migration, breathing,
nursing, breeding, feeding, or sheltering
(Level B harassment).
Here, authorized takes are by Level B
harassment only, in the form behavioral
response to noise, or short-term
disruption of behavioral patterns
resulting from exposure to sound
generated during pile driving and
extraction activities. Based on the
nature of the activity, Level A
harassment is neither anticipated nor
authorized. As described previously, no
serious injury or mortality is anticipated
or authorized for this activity. Below,
we describe how the take numbers are
estimated.
For acoustic impacts, generally
speaking, we estimate take by
considering: (1) acoustic thresholds
above which NMFS believes the best
available science indicates marine
mammals will be behaviorally harassed
or incur some degree of permanent
hearing impairment; (2) the area or
volume of water that will be ensonified
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
above these levels in a day; (3) the
density or occurrence of marine
mammals within these ensonified areas;
and, (4) the number of days of activities.
We note that while these factors can
contribute to a basic calculation to
provide an initial prediction of potential
takes, additional information that can
qualitatively inform take estimates is
also sometimes available (e.g., previous
monitoring results or average group
size). Below, we describe the factors
considered here in more detail and
present the take estimates.
Acoustic Thresholds
NMFS recommends the use of
acoustic thresholds that identify the
received level of underwater sound
above which exposed marine mammals
would be reasonably expected to be
behaviorally harassed (equated to Level
B harassment) or to incur auditory
permanent threshold shift (PTS) of some
degree (equated to Level A harassment).
Level B harassment is largely driven
by received level, the onset of
behavioral disturbance from
anthropogenic noise exposure is also
informed to varying degrees by other
factors related to the source or exposure
context (e.g., frequency, predictability,
duty cycle, duration of the exposure,
signal-to-noise ratio, distance to the
source), the environment (e.g.,
bathymetry, other noises in the area,
predators in the area), and the receiving
animals (hearing, motivation,
experience, demography, life stage,
depth) and can be difficult to predict
(e.g., Southall et al., 2007, 2021; Ellison
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et al., 2012). Based on what the
available science indicates and the
practical need to use a threshold based
on a metric that is both predictable and
measurable for most activities, NMFS
typically uses a generalized acoustic
threshold based on received level to
estimate the onset of behavioral
harassment. NMFS generally predicts
that marine mammals are likely to be
behaviorally harassed in a manner
considered to be Level B harassment
when exposed to underwater
anthropogenic noise above root-meansquared pressure received levels (RMS
SPL) of 120 dB (referenced to 1
micropascal (re 1 mPa)) for continuous
(e.g., vibratory pile driving, drilling)
sources, and above RMS SPL 160 dB re
1 mPa for non-explosive impulsive (e.g.,
seismic airguns) or intermittent (e.g.,
scientific sonar) sources. Generally
speaking, Level B harassment take
estimates based on these behavioral
harassment thresholds are expected to
include any likely takes by temporary
threshold shift (TTS) as, in most cases,
the likelihood of TTS occurs at
distances from the source less than
those at which behavioral harassment is
likely. TTS of a sufficient degree can
manifest as behavioral harassment, as
reduced hearing sensitivity and the
potential reduced opportunities to
detect important signals (masking of
vocalization/conspecific
communication, predators, prey) may
result in changes in behavior patterns
that would not otherwise occur.
The specified activity includes the
use of continuous (vibratory pile
extraction) and impulsive (impact pile
driving) sources, and therefore the RMS
SPL thresholds of 120 and 160 dB re 1
mPa would typically be applicable.
However, as discussed above, the Navy
has established that the ambient noise
in the project area is 126 dB re 1 mPa
(rms). Since this is louder than the 120
dB threshold for continuous sources,
126 dB becomes the effective threshold
for Level B harassment for continuous
sources.
Level A harassment is described in
detail in NMFS’ Technical Guidance for
Assessing the Effects of Anthropogenic
Sound on Marine Mammal Hearing
(Version 2.0) (Technical Guidance,
2018). The Technical Guidance
identifies dual criteria to assess auditory
injury (Level A harassment) to five
different marine mammal groups (based
on hearing sensitivity) as a result of
exposure to noise from two different
types of sources (impulsive or nonimpulsive). The Navy’s specified
activity includes the use of both
impulsive (impact pile driving) and
non-impulsive (vibratory extraction)
sources.
The Level A harassment thresholds
are provided in the table below. The
references, analysis, and methodology
used in the development of the
thresholds are described in NMFS’ 2018
Technical Guidance, which may be
accessed at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/
marine-mammal-protection/marinemammal-acoustic-technical-guidance.
No project activities are expected to
approach levels that may induce PTS or
other injury, and no take by Level A
harassment is expected or authorized.
TABLE 4—THRESHOLDS IDENTIFYING THE ONSET OF PERMANENT THRESHOLD SHIFT
PTS onset acoustic thresholds (received level)
Hearing group
Impulsive
Low-Frequency (LF) Cetaceans ......................................
Mid-Frequency (MF) Cetaceans ......................................
High-Frequency (HF) Cetaceans .....................................
Phocid Pinnipeds (PW) (Underwater) .............................
Otariid Pinnipeds (OW) (Underwater) .............................
Ensonified Area
Here, we describe the parameters of
the specified activity used to estimate
the ensonified area and application of
related acoustic thresholds, including
source levels and transmission loss
coefficient.
The ensonified area associated with
Level A harassment is more technically
challenging to predict due to the need
to account for a duration component.
Therefore, NMFS developed an optional
User Spreadsheet tool to accompany the
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
1:
3:
5:
7:
9:
Non-impulsive
Lpk,flat: 219 dB; LE,LF,24h: 183 dB .........................
Lpk,flat: 230 dB; LE,MF,24h: 185 dB ........................
Lpk,flat: 202 dB; LE,HF,24h: 155 dB ........................
Lpk,flat: 218 dB; LE,PW,24h: 185 dB .....................
Lpk,flat: 232 dB; LE,OW,24h: 203 dB .......................
Technical Guidance that can be used to
relatively simply predict an isopleth
distance for use in conjunction with
marine mammal density or occurrence
to help predict potential takes. We note
that because of some of the assumptions
included in the methods underlying this
optional tool, we anticipate that the
resulting isopleth estimates are typically
going to be overestimates of some
degree, which may result in an
overestimate of potential take by Level
A harassment. However, this optional
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
Cell
2: LE,LF,24h: 199 dB.
4: LE,MF,24h: 198 dB.
6: LE,HF,24h: 173 dB.
8: LE,PW,24h: 201 dB.
10: LE,OW,24h: 219 dB.
tool offers the best way to estimate
isopleth distances when more
sophisticated modeling methods are not
available or practical. For stationary
sources (such as pile driving and
removal), the optional User Spreadsheet
tool predicts the distance at which, if a
marine mammal remained at that
distance for the duration of the activity,
it would be expected to incur PTS.
Inputs used in the optional User
Spreadsheet tool, and the resulting
estimated isopleths, are reported below.
TABLE 5—CALCULATED EXTENT OF LEVEL A AND LEVEL B HARASSMENT ZONES
Level A harassment
zones 2
(meters)
Pile size/type & source levels 1
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Activity description
California
sea lions
Vibratory Extraction 3
Impact Driving 6 .......
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Level B
harassment zones 2
(meters)
24-inch octagonal/square concrete (Production) (162
RMS).
24-inch octagonal concrete (TPP) 4 (162 RMS) ........
24-inch octagonal concrete (TPP) 4 (188 Peak, 176
RMS, 166 SEL).
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Harbor
seals
Coastal
bottlenose
dolphins
All species
0.0
6.8
1.0
5 3,525
0.0
0.0
2.3
28.0
0.3
1.9
375
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 4, 2023 / Notices
TABLE 5—CALCULATED EXTENT OF LEVEL A AND LEVEL B HARASSMENT ZONES—Continued
Level A harassment
zones 2
(meters)
Level B
harassment zones 2
(meters)
Pile size/type & source levels 1
Activity description
California
sea lions
24-inch octagonal concrete (Production) (188 Peak,
176 RMS, 166 SEL).
0.0
Harbor
seals
Coastal
bottlenose
dolphins
58.2
All species
3.9
1 Sound source levels at 10 meters (m) (33 ft.) distance. Units for Peak and RMS are dB re 1 μPa. The unit for sound exposure level (SEL) is
dB 1 μPa2-sec.
2 Level A distances are based on a site-specific model for California sea lions (Dall’Osto and Dahl, 2019) and a generic Practical Spreading
Loss model (NMFS, 2018, 2020) for harbor seals and coastal bottlenose dolphins. The Level A harassment criteria are not exceeded for California sea lions based on the site-specific model (Dall’Osto and Dahl, 2019). Level B harassment distances are based on the site-specific model
(Dall’Osto and Dahl, 2019). No take by Level A harassment is requested or proposed for authorization.
3 Assumes 20 minutes of vibratory pile extraction, Weighting Factor Adjustment of 2.5 kHz, with 5 piles/day for Production, and 1 pile/day for
the TPP.
4 The TPP Piles will be installed via an impact hammer prior to the production piles, re-struck for testing approximately 1 week later, and then
removed prior to the start of production pile driving.
5 The distances represent the maximum north/south and east/west distance from the pile being driven. These distances are represented by the
green line in Figure 6–1 of the Navy’s application.
6 Assumes 600 strikes per pile, 0.01 second single-strike duration, Weighting Factor Adjustment of 2.0 kHz, with 3 piles/day for Production, and
1 pile/day for the TPP.
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Marine Mammal Occurrence
In this section we provide information
about the occurrence of marine
mammals, including density or other
relevant information which will inform
the take calculations. In the case of the
Navy’s FDD project, monitoring results
from nearby projects provide the best
available information about marine
mammal presence and abundance in the
project area. Accordingly, for purposes
of estimating density of species that may
occur in the project area, sightings
collected in the course of monitoring
projects for work at other locations
within the bounds of NBSD are used.
Due to the dynamic nature and
multitude of overlapping uses of the
north and north-central San Diego Bay,
a number of marine mammal surveys
have been conducted (Merkel and
Associates, Inc., 2008; Sorensen and
Swope, 2010; Graham and Saunders
2014; Naval Facilities Engineering
Command, Southwest (NAVFAC SW)
2018b). Based on these surveys
California sea lions are the predominant
species observed. However, relative to
the FDD project area, only one
dedicated line transect survey (Sorensen
and Swope, 2010) surveyed an area
south of the Coronado Bridge. During
the Sorensen and Swope (2010) survey,
two sightings of one California sea lion
each were reported in the water adjacent
to NBSD. As presented in the NBSD Pier
6 Replacement Project’s first year’s
interim report (NAVFAC SW, 2022) a
clearer picture of marine mammal
activity south of the Coronado Bay
Bridge was developed during 132 days
of observations. This recent monitoring
effort found that California sea lions
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were the most common species
observed south of the Coronado Bridge
(69.9 percent), but coastal bottlenose
dolphins (29.5 percent), and to a lesser
extent harbor seals (0.6 percent), were
observed as well. The Pier 6
Replacement Project data represents the
best available science for an area that is
close to the project area described here.
Accordingly, the application uses these
prior observations from the immediate
vicinity as a basis for assessing potential
project impacts to California sea lions,
coastal bottlenose dolphins, and harbor
seals by leveraging the numbers
provided in NAVFAC SW (2022).
Take Estimation
Here, we describe how the
information provided in the application
was synthesized to produce the
quantitative estimate of the take that
informed the authorization. Changes
described in Changes from the Proposed
IHA to Final IHA above are expected to
reduce the effects described below.
However, due to the potential for further
changes that may arise during
construction, the Navy requests that the
higher take estimates that follow below,
and that were developed based on the
construction methods and materials
described in the initial application.
The degree to which underwater noise
propagates away from a noise source is
dependent on a variety of factors, most
notably by bathymetry and the presence
or absence of reflective or absorptive
conditions, including the sea surface
and sediment type. The two models
used to assess the potential distances to
regulatory thresholds and to evaluate
the potential for Level A/B harassment:
(Dall’Osto and Dahl 2019; NMFS 2018,
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2020), and a Practical Spreading Loss
model (PSL). Dall’Osto and Dahl (2019)
developed site-relevant acoustic models
using point sources at three locations
(Pier 1, Pier 6 and Pier 13) along the
eastern extent of the south-central San
Diego Bay on NBSD. Due to the similar
bathymetry and location with respect to
the channel, the Pier 13 modeling
location, which is roughly 725 meters to
the south of the Project location
approximates the sound propagation
profile from a notional source at the
Mole Pier mooring wharf FFD location.
Key to this profile is the dampening
effect of sound due to the western slope
of the dredged navigation channel, as
well as channelization of sound to the
north and south within the channel.
While the Pier 13 point is not exactly in
the project location, the model provides
suitable representation of sound
propagation in the project area with a
higher degree of resolution than a
generic PSL model would provide.
Harbor seals and coastal bottlenose
dolphins were not included in the sitespecific modeling effort for Level A
harassment isopleth calculations. As a
result, the NMFS user spreadsheet
(NMFS 2020) was used to determine
Level A harassment zones for these
species. To determine zones for
potential Level B harassment, the sitespecific model was used for all species
because the threshold criteria for Level
B harassment are based solely on
continuous or impulsive noise source
and are not frequency-dependent.
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TABLE 6—ESTIMATED TAKES FROM LEVEL B HARASSMENT
Expected
average
individuals
per day
Species
California sea lion ................................................................................................
Harbor seal ..........................................................................................................
Coastal bottlenose dolphin ..................................................................................
1 Based
2
1
1
118
59
59
Stock
abundance
257, 606
30,968
453
Instances of
take as
percent of
stock
0.05%
0.19%
13%
on 59 days of pile driving activity.
Mitigation
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Requested 1
Level B take
In order to issue an IHA under section
101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA, NMFS must
set forth the permissible methods of
taking pursuant to the activity, and
other means of effecting the least
practicable impact on the species or
stock and its habitat, paying particular
attention to rookeries, mating grounds,
and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of the species or stock
for taking for certain subsistence uses
(latter not applicable for this action).
NMFS regulations require applicants for
incidental take authorizations to include
information about the availability and
feasibility (economic and technological)
of equipment, methods, and manner of
conducting the activity or other means
of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact upon the affected species or
stocks, and their habitat (50 CFR
216.104(a)(11)).
In evaluating how mitigation may or
may not be appropriate to ensure the
least practicable adverse impact on
species or stocks and their habitat, as
well as subsistence uses where
applicable, NMFS considers two
primary factors:
(1) The manner in which, and the
degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure(s) is
expected to reduce impacts to marine
mammals, marine mammal species or
stocks, and their habitat. This considers
the nature of the potential adverse
impact being mitigated (likelihood,
scope, range). It further considers the
likelihood that the measure will be
effective if implemented (probability of
accomplishing the mitigating result if
implemented as planned), the
likelihood of effective implementation
(probability implemented as planned),
and;
(2) The practicability of the measures
for applicant implementation, which
may consider such things as cost,
impact on operations.
The following mitigation measures are
required in order to avoid and minimize
the potential for Level A harassment
and to reduce, to the lowest extent
practicable, exposure to noise exceeding
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Level B harassment criteria. The
contractor is responsible for complying
with all the mitigation measures listed
below, whereas on-site Navy
representatives will monitor the
contractor’s performance and require
corrective action or stop work, if
necessary, to ensure that requirements
are met.
(1) Time Restriction: The Navy plans
to conduct in-water pile extraction/
installation activities only when
sufficient ambient light is available for
visual observations (generally 30
minutes after sunrise and up to 45
minutes before sunset); however, the
Lead Protected Species Observer will
make a final determination as to when
to start or stop activities based on
ambient lighting conditions.
(2) General Vessel and Machinery
Stoppage: For in-water activities,
including heavy machinery activities
other than pile extraction/installation
(e.g., barge movements) or when using
vessels, if a marine mammal comes
within 10 m (33 ft.), the activity must
cease operations and/or reduce vessel
speed to the minimum level required to
maintain steerage and safe working
conditions.
(3) Pre-Construction Briefing: Prior to
the start of all in-water pile installation
or extraction activities, briefings will be
conducted for construction supervisors
and crews, the monitoring team and
when new personnel join the work. The
briefing will explain responsibilities,
communication procedures, the marine
mammal protocols, and operational
procedures for stopping/delaying inwater activities.
(4) Protected Marine Species Visual
Monitoring: Marine Species Visual
Monitoring will assess and document
any effects on marine mammals. PSOs
will visually observe the surrounding
waters for marine mammal presence,
assess any potential Level B harassment
and ensure effective notification of any
animals sighted in established
shutdown zones.
• Monitoring will take place from 30
minutes prior to initiation through 30
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
minutes post-completion of pile
extraction/installation activities;
• During all observation periods, the
PSOs will use binoculars and/or the
naked eye to search continuously for
protected marine species;
• Shutdown zone(s) may only be
declared clear, and pile extraction/
installation started, when the entire
shutdown zone is visible (i.e., when not
obscured by a poor light, rain, fog, etc.).
If the applicable shutdown zone is
obscured by fog or poor lighting
conditions, activity at the location will
not be initiated until the shutdown zone
is visible.
(4) All observers shall have no other
project-related tasks while recording
data to address the following
requirements:
a. Date and time that pile extraction/
installation begins or ends;
b. Construction activities occurring
during each observation period;
c. Weather parameters (e.g., wind,
temperature, percent cloud cover, and
visibility);
d. Tide stage and sea state (The
Beaufort Sea State Scale will be used to
determine sea-state);
e. Species, numbers, and, if possible,
sex and age class of marine mammals;
f. Marine mammal behavior patterns
observed, including bearing and
direction of travel, and if possible, the
correlation to Sound Pressure Levels;
g. Distance from pile installation
activities to marine mammals and
distance of a sighted marine mammal
from the observation point;
h. Locations of all PSOs; and
i. Other, relevant human activity in
the area.
(5) Soft Start: The use of soft-start
procedures for impact pile driving are
expected to provide additional
protection to marine mammals by
providing a warning and/or giving
marine mammals a chance to leave the
area prior to the hammer operating at
full capacity.
6. Shutdown Zones:
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TABLE 7—SHUTDOWN ZONES
Shutdown zones (meters)
Activity description
Pile size/type & source levels
Vibratory Extraction ............
24-inch octagonal/square concrete (Production) (162 RMS) .................
24-inch octagonal concrete (TPP) (162 RMS) .......................................
24-inch octagonal concrete (TPP) (188 Peak, 176 RMS, 166 SEL) .....
24-inch octagonal concrete (Production) (188 Peak, 176 RMS, 166
SEL).
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Impact Driving .....................
• Based on the activity and species
observed shutdown zones will be
established around in-water pile
extraction/installation activities to avoid
the potential for Level A harassment of
marine mammals.
• One Pier-based PSO will be
stationed with clear view of the
shutdown zone(s) and will be
responsible for initiating shutdowns/
delays of project activities, monitoring
for animals in close proximity to the
project site, and the collection of
project-related activity data (i.e., pile
extraction/installation start and stop
times, shutdowns/delays);
• Visual surveys will occur for at
least 30 minutes prior to the start of pile
extraction/installation;
• If marine mammals covered under
the IHA are present within the Level B
harassment zone, in-water construction
or demolition will be allowed to start
without delay.
• If a marine mammal covered in the
IHA enters an applicable shutdown
zone, all pile extraction/installation
activities at that location shall be
delayed. The animal(s) shall be allowed
to remain in the shutdown zone (i.e.,
must leave of their own volition) and
their behavior must be monitored and
documented. Work will be allowed to
start once the animal has been observed
either leaving the shutdown area, or 15
minutes has elapsed since the last
observation without re-detection of the
animal;
• If a marine mammal covered in the
IHA enters the applicable shutdown
zone, the PSO shall direct a halt of all
pile extraction/installation activities at
that location and initiate mitigation. The
animal(s) must be allowed to remain in
the shutdown zone (i.e., must leave of
their own volition) and their behavior
must be monitored and documented.
Work may restart once the animal has
been observed either leaving the
shutdown area, or 15 minutes has
elapsed since the last observation
without re-detection of a marine
mammal;
• If a marine mammal not covered in
the IHA enters the applicable Level B
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California
sea lions
harassment zone, all pile extraction/
installation activities shall be halted.
The animal(s) must be allowed to
remain in the Level B harassment zone
(i.e., must leave of their own volition)
and their behavior must be monitored
and documented. Work will be allowed
to restart once the animal has been
observed either leaving the Level B
harassment zone, or 60 minutes has
elapsed since the last observation
without re-detection of the animal; and
• In the unlikely event that
environmental conditions, such as
heavy fog, prevent the visual detection
of marine mammals within the
shutdown zone (see Table 7), in-water
demolition or construction activities
will not be initiated. If in-water
demolition or construction activities
have been initiated, and conditions
deteriorate so that the shutdown zone is
not completely visible, then activities
will be delayed until the zone is fully
visible.
Based on our evaluation of these
measures NMFS has determined that the
required mitigation measures provide
the means of effecting the least
practicable impact on the affected
species or stocks and their habitat,
paying particular attention to rookeries,
mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance.
Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA for an
activity, section 101(a)(5)(D) of the
MMPA states that NMFS must set forth
requirements pertaining to the
monitoring and reporting of such taking.
The MMPA implementing regulations at
50 CFR 216.104(a)(13) indicate that
requests for authorizations must include
the suggested means of accomplishing
the necessary monitoring and reporting
that will result in increased knowledge
of the species and of the level of taking
or impacts on populations of marine
mammals that are expected to be
present while conducting the activities.
Effective reporting is critical both to
compliance as well as ensuring that the
most value is obtained from the required
monitoring.
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Fmt 4703
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10
10
10
10
Coastal
bottlenose
dolphins
Harbor
seals
10
10
30
60
10
10
10
10
Monitoring and reporting
requirements prescribed by NMFS
should contribute to improved
understanding of one or more of the
following:
• Occurrence of marine mammal
species or stocks in the area in which
take is anticipated (e.g., presence,
abundance, distribution, density);
• Nature, scope, or context of likely
marine mammal exposure to potential
stressors/impacts (individual or
cumulative, acute or chronic), through
better understanding of: (1) action or
environment (e.g., source
characterization, propagation, ambient
noise); (2) affected species (e.g., life
history, dive patterns); (3) co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the
activity; or (4) biological or behavioral
context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or
feeding areas);
• Individual marine mammal
responses (behavioral or physiological)
to acoustic stressors (acute, chronic, or
cumulative), other stressors, or
cumulative impacts from multiple
stressors;
• How anticipated responses to
stressors impact either: (1) long-term
fitness and survival of individual
marine mammals; or (2) populations,
species, or stocks;
• Effects on marine mammal habitat
(e.g., marine mammal prey species,
acoustic habitat, or other important
physical components of marine
mammal habitat); and
• Mitigation and monitoring
effectiveness.
The Navy addresses the above
requirements in depth in its NMFSapproved Marine Species Monitoring
Plan and plans to implement the
following procedures:
The Navy will retain independent
PSOs to collect marine mammal
sightings data, including behaviors,
during site preparation in the preconstruction period, during all in-water
workdays, through completion of in
water construction and the
demobilization of pile extraction/
installation extraction equipment. To
eliminate the potential for bias, all
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marine mammal observations will be
logged, regardless of proximity to the
Level A or Level B harassment zones.
The efficacy of visual detection depends
on several factors including the PSO’s
ability to detect the animal, the
environmental conditions (visibility and
sea state), and monitoring platforms. All
observers shall be trained in marine
mammal identification and behaviors,
and satisfy the following criteria:
• Visual acuity in both eyes
(correction is permissible) sufficient to
discern moving targets at the water’s
surface with ability to estimate target
size and distance. Use of binoculars or
spotting scope may be necessary to
correctly identify the target.
• Advanced education in biological
science, wildlife management,
mammalogy or related field (Bachelor’s
degree or higher is preferred), or
equivalent Alaska Native traditional
knowledge.
• Experience and ability to conduct
field observations and collect data
according to assigned protocols (this
may include academic experience).
• Experience or training in the field
identification of marine mammals
(cetaceans and pinnipeds).
• Sufficient training, orientation or
experience with vessel operation and
pile driving operations to provide for
personal safety during observations.
• Writing skills sufficient to prepare a
report of observations. Reports should
include such information as the
number, type, and location of marine
mammals observed; the behavior of
marine mammals in the area of potential
sound effects during construction; dates
and times when observations and inwater construction activities were
conducted; dates and times when inwater construction activities were
suspended because of marine mammals,
etc.
• Ability to communicate orally, by
radio or in person, with project
personnel to provide real time
information on marine mammals
observed in the area and necessary
actions, as needed.
General Visual Monitoring Protocols:
Trained PSOs will be placed at the best
vantage point(s) practicable (e.g., the
crane barge, on shore, or any other
suitable location) to monitor for marine
mammals and implement shutdown/
delay procedures, when applicable, by
notifying the construction operator of a
need for a work stoppage.
Marine Mammal Monitoring Protocols
• Observation data will be recorded
for any marine mammals within visual
range of the PSO, regardless of
proximity to the monitoring zones;
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20:21 Oct 03, 2023
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• Up to three PSOs at up to three
locations will conduct the marine
mammal monitoring depending on the
activity and size of monitoring zones
(see Figure 1–2 of the Navy’s
application). All PSOs will
communicate with each other to
enhance tracking of marine mammals
that may be moving through the area
and to minimize duplicate observation
records of the same animal by different
PSOs (i.e., a re-sighting);
• Results of all protected marine
mammal observations will be recorded
on electronic tablet or hardcopy
datasheets (see Appendix A for an
example of a hard-copy datasheet);
• If an injured, sick, or dead marine
mammal is observed, procedures
outlined in Section 3.0 of the Navy’s
application will be followed:
Æ In the event that personnel
involved in the Project-related activities
discover an injured or dead marine
mammal, the Navy POC for the IHA
shall report the incident to the Office of
Protected Resources (OPR), NMFS, and
the Regional Stranding Coordinator as
soon as feasible;
Æ If the death or injury was clearly
caused by the specified activity, the
IHA-holder must immediately cease the
specified activities until NMFS is able
to review the circumstances of the
incident and determine what, if any,
additional measures are appropriate to
ensure compliance with the terms of the
IHA. The IHA-holder must not resume
their activities until notified by NMFS.
Æ The report will include the
following information:
D Time, date, and location (latitude/
longitude) of the first discovery (and
updated location information if known
and applicable);
D Species identification (if known) or
description of the animal(s) involved;
D Condition of the animal(s)
(including carcass condition if the
animal is dead);
D Observed behavior of the animal(s),
if alive;
D If available, photographs or video
footage of the animal(s); and
D General circumstances under which
the animal was discovered.
Æ In the event that an injured or dead
marine mammal is discovered, and the
Lead PSO determines that the cause of
the injury or death is unknown and the
death is relatively recent (i.e., in less
than a moderate state of decomposition
as described in the next paragraph), the
PSO will report to the Navy POC;
Æ Within 24 hours, the Navy POC
will report the incident to the NBSD
Base Biologist, the NMFS OPR, and the
appropriate West Coast Region Marine
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Mammal Network Stranding
Coordinators as noted above;
Æ The report will include the same
information identified above. Pursuant
to NMFS instruction and approval,
activities may continue while the
circumstances of the incident are under
review;
Æ In the event that an injured or dead
marine mammal is discovered, and the
Lead PSO determines that the injury or
death is not a result of activities
authorized in the IHA (i.e., previously
wounded animal, carcass with moderate
to advanced decomposition, or
scavenger damage), the Lead PSO will
report the incident to the Navy POC,
who will report the animal(s) to the
NBSD base biologist;
Æ The appropriate West Coast Region
Marine Mammal Network Stranding
Coordinators, as noted above, will be
notified within 24 hours of the
discovery;
Æ The PSOs will provide photographs
or video footage (if available) or other
documentation of the stranded animal
sighting to the Navy POC under such a
case; and
Æ At no time should the PSO handle,
or attempt to handle, a dead marine
mammal.
Pre-Construction Monitoring
Visual surveys will occur for at least
30 minutes prior to the start of pile
extraction/installation and mitigation
measures will be initiated as described
above.
Monitoring Concurrent With
Construction
• If a marine mammal approaches, or
appears to be approaching, the
shutdown zone(s), the PSO who first
observed the animal will alert the
‘‘Command’’ PSO, who will notify the
construction crew of the animal’s
current status. In-water activities
addressed in the IHA will be allowed to
continue while the animal remains
outside the shutdown zone;
• If shutdown and/or clearance
procedures would result in an imminent
concern for human safety, then the
activity will be allowed to continue
until the safety concern is addressed.
During that timeframe, the animal(s)
will be continuously monitored, and the
Navy POC will be notified and
consulted prior to re-initiation of
Project-related activities; and
• Regardless of location within the
Level B harassment zone, an initial
behavior and the location of the
animal(s) will be logged. Behaviors will
be continually logged until the animal is
either passed off to another PSO, the
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 4, 2023 / Notices
animal is no longer visible, or it has left
the Level B harassment zone.
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Post-Activity Monitoring
• Monitoring of all zones will
continue for 30 minutes following
completion of pile extraction/
installation and drilling activities. These
surveys will record all marine mammal
observations following the same
procedures as identified for the preconstruction monitoring time-period,
and will focus on observing and
reporting unusual or abnormal
behaviors; and
• A summary report of recorded
observations, work stoppages (if any)
and an assessment of (1) effectiveness of
mitigation and (2) recommendations for
adjustment to future monitoring
protocols will be required within 90
days of project completion or expiration
of an IHA.
Negligible Impact Analysis and
Determination
NMFS has defined negligible impact
as an impact resulting from the
specified activity that cannot be
reasonably expected to, and is not
reasonably likely to, adversely affect the
species or stock through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival
(50 CFR 216.103). A negligible impact
finding is based on the lack of likely
adverse effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival (i.e., populationlevel effects). An estimate of the number
of takes alone is not enough information
on which to base an impact
determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of
marine mammals that might be ‘‘taken’’
through harassment, NMFS considers
other factors, such as the likely nature
of any impacts or responses (e.g.,
intensity, duration), the context of any
impacts or responses (e.g., critical
reproductive time or location, foraging
impacts affecting energetics), as well as
effects on habitat, and the likely
effectiveness of the mitigation. We also
assess the number, intensity, and
context of estimated takes by evaluating
this information relative to population
status. Consistent with the 1989
preamble for NMFS’ implementing
regulations (54 FR 40338, September 29,
1989), the impacts from other past and
ongoing anthropogenic activities are
incorporated into this analysis via their
impacts on the baseline (e.g., as
reflected in the regulatory status of the
species, population size and growth rate
where known, ongoing sources of
human-caused mortality, or ambient
noise levels).
To avoid repetition, this discussion of
our analysis applies to all the species
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20:21 Oct 03, 2023
Jkt 262001
listed in Table 2, given that the
anticipated effects of this activity on
these different marine mammal stocks
are expected to be similar. There is little
information about the nature or severity
of the impacts, or the size, status, or
structure of any of these species or
stocks that would lead to a different
analysis for this activity.
The takes from Level B harassment
would be due to potential behavioral
disturbance such as avoidance or
temporary displacement or temporary
shift in hearing threshold. No mortality
is anticipated given the nature of the
activity and measures designed to
minimize the possibility of injury to
marine mammals. The potential for
harassment is minimized through the
construction method and the
implementation of the planned
mitigation measures (see Mitigation
section).
The nature of the pile driving project
precludes the likelihood of serious
injury or mortality. Take would occur
within a limited, confined area (southcentral San Diego Bay) of the stock’s
range. The duration and intensity of
Level B harassment events will be
minimized through use of mitigation
measures described herein. Further the
amount of take proposed to be
authorized is extremely small when
compared to stock abundance.
Behavioral responses of marine
mammals to pile driving at the project
site, if any, are expected to be mild and
temporary. Marine mammals within the
Level B harassment zone may not show
any visual cues they are disturbed or
could become alert, avoid the area, leave
the area, or display other mild responses
that are not observable such as changes
in vocalization patterns. Given the short
duration of noise-generating activities
per day and that pile driving and
removal would occur across 6 months,
any harassment would be temporary.
There are no other areas or times of
known biological importance for any of
the affected species.
In addition, it is unlikely that minor
noise effects in a small, localized area of
habitat would have any effect on the
stocks’ ability to recover. In
combination, we believe that these
factors, as well as the available body of
evidence from other similar activities,
demonstrate that the potential effects of
the specified activities will have only
minor, short-term effects on individuals.
The specified activities are not expected
to impact rates of recruitment or
survival and will therefore not result in
population-level impacts.
In summary and as described above,
the following factors primarily support
our determination that the impacts
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68585
resulting from this activity are not
expected to adversely affect any of the
species or stocks through effects on
annual rates of recruitment or survival:
• No serious injury or mortality is
anticipated or authorized;
• No important habitat areas have
been identified within the project area;
• For all species, San Diego Bay is a
peripheral part of their range;
• Among the suitable options for
construction available, the Navy will
select lower-impact techniques such as
vibratory pile driving in lieu of impact
driving, to the maximum extent
practicable;
• The Navy will adhere to standards
for soft-starts when impact driving and
shut downs for all in-water activities
subject to work stoppage; and
• Monitoring reports from similar
work in San Diego Bay have
documented little to no effect on
individuals of the same species
resulting from the specified activities.
Based on the analysis contained
herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals
and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the
proposed monitoring and mitigation
measures, NMFS finds that the total
marine mammal take from the specified
activity will have a negligible impact on
all affected marine mammal species or
stocks.
Small Numbers
As noted previously, only take of
small numbers of marine mammals may
be authorized under sections
101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA for
specified activities other than military
readiness activities. The MMPA does
not define small numbers and so, in
practice, where estimated numbers are
available, NMFS compares the number
of individuals taken to the most
appropriate estimation of abundance of
the relevant species or stock in our
determination of whether an
authorization is limited to small
numbers of marine mammals. When the
predicted number of individuals to be
taken is fewer than one-third of the
species or stock abundance, the take is
considered to be of small numbers.
Additionally, other qualitative factors
may be considered in the analysis, such
as the temporal or spatial scale of the
activities.
The amount of take NMFS has
authorized is below one-third of the
estimated stock abundance of the three
species that may be subject to Level B
harassment from the proposed pile
driving and extraction activities.
These estimated takes meet the ‘‘small
numbers’’ criterion given that total
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 191 / Wednesday, October 4, 2023 / Notices
requested instances of take equate to no
more than 13 percent of any stock
expected to be taken, less than
benchmark of less than one-third of
stock abundance often used to
substantiate a small numbers finding.
Comparing estimated instances of take
against stock abundance for assessment
of small numbers is a conservative
approach and is likely to over-estimate
the number of animals that may be
affected by the activity.
Based on the analysis contained
herein of the specified activity
(including the mitigation and
monitoring measures) and the
anticipated take of marine mammals,
NMFS finds that small numbers of
marine mammals would be taken
relative to the population size of the
affected species or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis
and Determination
There are no relevant subsistence uses
of the affected marine mammal stocks or
species implicated by this action.
Therefore, NMFS has determined that
the total taking of affected species or
stocks would not have an unmitigable
adverse impact on the availability of
such species or stocks for taking for
subsistence purposes.
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Endangered Species Act
Section 7(a)(2) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973 (ESA; 16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq.) requires that each Federal
agency insure that any action it
authorizes, funds, or carries out is not
likely to jeopardize the continued
existence of any endangered or
threatened species or result in the
destruction or adverse modification of
designated critical habitat. To ensure
ESA compliance for the issuance of
IHAs, NMFS consults internally
whenever we propose to authorize take
for endangered or threatened species.
No incidental take of ESA-listed
species is proposed for authorization or
expected to result from this activity.
Therefore, NMFS has determined that
formal consultation under section 7 of
the ESA is not required for this action.
National Environmental Policy Act
To comply with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and
NOAA Administrative Order (NAO)
216–6A, NMFS must review our
proposed action (i.e., the issuance of an
IHA) with respect to potential impacts
on the human environment. This action
is consistent with categories of activities
identified in Categorical Exclusion B4
(IHAs with no anticipated serious injury
or mortality) of the Companion Manual
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:21 Oct 03, 2023
Jkt 262001
for NOAA Administrative Order 216–
6A, which do not individually or
cumulatively have the potential for
significant impacts on the quality of the
human environment and for which we
have not identified any extraordinary
circumstances that would preclude this
categorical exclusion. Accordingly,
NMFS has determined that the issuance
of the IHA qualifies to be categorically
excluded from further NEPA review.
Authorization
NMFS has issued an IHA to the Navy
for the incidental take of marine
mammals due to in-water construction
activities associated with the Floating
Dry Dock Project at Naval Base San
Diego in San Diego, California from
March 1, 2024 to February 28, 2025,
provided the previously mentioned
mitigation, monitoring, and reporting
requirements are incorporated.
Dated: September 28, 2023.
Kimberly Damon-Randall,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–21920 Filed 10–3–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
Review and Approval; Comment
Request; Proposed Information
Collection; Comment Request; U.S.Canada Albacore Treaty Reporting
System
National Oceanic &
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of information collection,
request for comment.
AGENCY:
The Department of
Commerce, in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), invites the general public and
other Federal agencies to comment on
proposed, and continuing information
collections, which helps us assess the
impact of our information collection
requirements and minimize the public’s
reporting burden. The purpose of this
notice is to allow for 60 days of public
comment preceding submission of the
collection to OMB.
DATES: To ensure consideration,
comments regarding this proposed
information collection must be received
on or before December 4, 2023.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Interested persons are
invited to submit written comments to
Adrienne Thomas, NOAA PRA Officer,
at NOAA.PRA@noaa.gov. Please
reference OMB Control Number 0648–
0492 in the subject line of your
comments. Do not submit Confidential
Business Information or otherwise
sensitive or protected information.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
specific questions related to collection
activities should be directed to Karen
Palmigiano, National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), karen.palmigiano@
noaa.gov, 206–526–4491, West Coast
Region (WCR) Permits Branch, 7600
Sand Point Way NE, Bldg. 1, Seattle,
WA 98115.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Abstract
This request is for an extension of a
currently approved information
collection.
The National Marine Fisheries Service
(NMFS), West Coast Region (WCR),
manages the United States (U.S.)—
Canada Albacore Tuna Treaty of 1981
(Treaty). Owners of vessels that fish
from U.S. West Coast ports for albacore
tuna (Thunnus alalunga) are required to
notify the NMFS WCR of their desire to
be on the list of vessels provided to
Canada each year indicating vessels
eligible to fish for albacore tuna in
waters under the jurisdiction of Canada.
Additionally, vessel operators are
required to report in advance their
intention to fish in Canadian waters
prior to crossing the maritime border as
well as to mark their fishing vessels to
facilitate enforcement of the effort limits
under the Treaty. Vessel operators are
also required to maintain and submit a
logbook of all catch and fishing effort.
The regulations implementing the
reporting and vessel marking
requirements under the Treaty are at 50
CFR part 300.172–300.176. If a vessel
enters into Canadian waters without
adhering to these regulations, they will
be in violation of the treaty and
Canadian enforcement may issue a fine
or a warning.
The estimated burden below includes
hours to complete the logbook
requirement, although it is assumed that
most if not all of the respondents
already complete the required logbook
under the mandatory West Coast Highly
Migratory Species Fishery Management
Plan (HMS FMP), OMB Control No.
0648–0223. Duplicate reporting under
the Treaty and HMS FMP is not
required. Most years, there will be much
less fishing (and thus less reporting)
E:\FR\FM\04OCN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 191 (Wednesday, October 4, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 68575-68586]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-21920]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[RTID 0648-XD398]
Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities;
Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to U.S. Navy Mole Pier South Berth
Floating Dry Dock Project
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; issuance of an incidental harassment authorization.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the regulations implementing the Marine
Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) as amended, notification is hereby given
that NMFS has issued an incidental harassment authorization (IHA) to
the U.S. Navy to incidentally harass marine mammals during construction
associated with Mole Pier Floating Dry Dock project at Naval Base San
Diego.
DATES: This Authorization is effective from March 1, 2024 through
February 28, 2025.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the application and supporting
documents, as well as a list of the references cited in this document,
may be obtained online at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/incidental-take-authorizations-construction-activities. In case of problems accessing these documents, please call
the contact listed below.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven Tucker, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The MMPA prohibits the ``take'' of marine mammals, with certain
exceptions. Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361
et seq.) direct the Secretary of Commerce (as delegated to NMFS) to
allow, upon request, the incidental, but not intentional, taking of
small numbers of marine mammals by U.S. citizens who engage in a
specified activity (other than commercial fishing) within a specified
geographical region if certain findings are made and either regulations
are proposed or, if the taking is limited to harassment, a notice of a
proposed IHA is provided to the public for review.
Authorization for incidental takings shall be granted if NMFS finds
that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species or
stock(s) and will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for taking for subsistence uses
(where relevant). Further, NMFS must prescribe the permissible methods
of taking and other ``means of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact'' on the affected species or stocks and their habitat, paying
particular attention to rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar
significance, and on the availability of the species or stocks for
taking for certain subsistence uses (referred to in shorthand as
``mitigation''); and requirements pertaining to the mitigation,
monitoring and reporting of the takings are set forth. The definitions
of all applicable MMPA statutory terms cited above are included in the
relevant sections below.
Summary of Request
On February 16, 2022, NMFS received a request from the U.S. Navy,
Navy Base San Diego (or, the Navy) for an IHA to take marine mammals
incidental to Mole Pier Floating Dry Dock project in south-central San
Diego Bay. The application was deemed adequate and complete on May 1,
2023. The Navy's request is for authorization to incidentally take
California sea lions, harbor seals, and bottlenose dolphins, by Level B
harassment only. Neither the U.S. Navy nor NMFS expect serious injury
or mortality to result from this activity and, therefore, an IHA is
appropriate.
NMFS previously issued an IHA to the U.S. Navy for similar work (87
FR 65578, October 31, 2022). The U.S. Navy has complied with all the
requirements (e.g., mitigation, monitoring, and reporting) of the
previous IHA, and information regarding their monitoring results is
publicly available at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/incidental-take-authorizations-construction-activities.
Description of Activity
Overview
The U.S. Navy request is associated with demolition and
construction activities related to partial demolition and construction
of a floating dry dock and related facilities at Mole Pier, Navy Base
San Diego. The purpose of the Mole Pier South Berth Floating Dry Dock
(FDD) Project is to overcome current shortfall in dry dock availability
for repair and maintenance of vessels at Navy Base San Diego. The
planned activity remedies some of the constraints resulting from aging
or obsolete facilities.
Activities that may result in Level B harassment include removal of
existing piles and installation of new piles to support facilities that
are necessary for repair and maintenance of vessels in furtherance of
the U.S. Navy's Congressionally mandated responsibilities under 10
U.S.C. 5062. The specified activity also includes dredging and
demolition of the existing deck at the mooring wharf, installation of
mooring attachments, installation of a steel floating dry dock and
construction of a ramp and pier. Demolition activities include
vibratory removal or clipping of up to fifty-four 24 x 24-inch square
concrete piles and seven 24-inch octagonal concrete piles. Pile driving
and extraction activities will take place during 33 days of in-water
work at the Mole Pier mooring wharf and the ramp. The Test Pile Program
(TPP) described in the notice of proposed authorization (88 FR 47111,
July 21, 2023) will not be undertaken. Permanent pile installations,
expected to occur via impact hammer and/or jetting, consist of eighty
24-inch octagonal concrete piles at the mooring wharf and twenty-one
24-inch octagonal piles for the Ramp Pier and access to the FDD.
Dates and Duration
The U.S. Navy requested that the IHA be effective for a period of 1
year, from March 1, 2024 through February 28, 2025. During this period,
the Navy expects to complete the pile driving and removal portions of
the project during 59 workdays that may be non-consecutive, with all
in-water activities conducted during daylight hours. Pile driving and
removal activities may occur at any time during the proposed 1-year
period of effectiveness.
Specific Geographic Region
The activities would occur in the south-central portion of San
Diego Bay. San Diego Bay (the Bay) is a narrow, crescent-shaped natural
embayment oriented northwest-southeast with an approximate length of 24
kilometers (km) and a total area of roughly 4 km\2\ (11,000 acres; Port
of San Diego, 2007). The width of the Bay ranges from 300 meters to
5.800 meters and depths range from 23 meters Mean Lower Low Water
(MLLW) near the tip of Ballast Point to less than 1.2 meters at the
southern end
[[Page 68576]]
(Merkel and Associates, Inc., 2009). Approximately half of the Bay is
less than 4.5 meters deep and much of it is less than 15 meters deep
(Merkel and Associates, Inc., 2009). The northern and central portions
of the Bay have been shaped by historical dredging and filling to
support large ship navigation and shoreline development. The United
States Army Corps of Engineers dredges the main navigation channel in
the Bay to maintain a depth of 14 meters MLLW and is responsible for
providing safe transit for private, commercial, and military vessels
within the bay (NOAA, 2012). Outside of the navigation channel, the bay
floor consists of platforms at depths that vary slightly (Merkel and
Associates, Inc., 2009). Within the Central Bay, typical depths range
from 10.7-11.6 meters MLLW to support large ship turning and anchorage,
and small vessel marinas are typically dredged to depths of 4.6 meters
MLLW (Merkel and Associates, Inc., 2009).
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN04OC23.012
San Diego Bay is heavily used by commercial, recreational, and
military vessels, with an average of 82,413 vessel movements (in or out
of the Bay) per year (approximately 225 vessel transits per day), a
majority of which are presumed to occur during daylight hours. This
number of transits does not include recreational boaters that use San
Diego Bay, estimated to number 200,000 annually (San Diego Harbor
Safety Committee, 2009). Background (ambient) noise in the south-
central San Diego Bay averaged 126 decibels (dB) re: 1 micropascal
([micro]Pa) in 2019 (Dahl and Dall'Osto, 2019). Therefore, noise from
non-impulsive sources associated with the specified activities is
assumed to become indistinguishable from background noise as it
diminishes to 126 dB with distance from the source (Dahl and Dall'Osto,
2019).
Detailed Description of the Specified Activity
The proposed FDD installation and associated dredging activities
would occur within San Diego Bay at the south berth of the Mole Pier,
which is located approximately 1.6 km (1 mile) south of the main
entrance gate to Navy Base San Diego (NBSD), immediately south of Pier
8 and the Paleta Creek Channel, and north of Pier 10.
The Mole Pier floating dry dock project includes the following
phases:
(1) Relocation of the USS Curtiss and hoteling facilities that are
currently moored along the south berth of the Mole Pier;
(2) Dredging at the Mole Pier FDD sump, approaches, and turning
basin to increase water-depths as well as subsequent sediment disposal
activities;
(3) Partial demolition of the existing decking at the mooring
wharf;
(4) Installation of mooring attachments and upgrades at the mooring
wharf;
(5) Demolition of existing Ramp Pier;
(6) Utility modifications;
(7) Placement and operation of a steel FDD; and
(8) Construction of a new Ramp Pier with vehicle access bridge from
the quay wall southeast of the 1 Mole Pier to the FDD.
[[Page 68577]]
Table 1--Proposed (Parentheses) and Revised (Bold) Pile Activities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total
Pile location Pile size/type Pile extraction Piles/ Number of estimated
method \1\ day piles days
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Demolition (Pile Extraction) \ 1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mooring Wharf..................... 24-inch Square --Hydraulic Pile 5 \3\ (24) (5) 5
Concrete. Clipper. 24 (2) 2
24-inch Octagonal --Vibratory \3\ (7) 7
Concrete. Extraction.
Ramp Pier......................... 24-inch Square --High-pressure Water (28) 29 (6) 6
Concrete. Jetting.
TPP (Cancelled/withdrawn)......... N/A.................. (1) 0 (6) 0 (6) 0
----------------------
Total Piles Removed........... ..................... ..................... ....... (65) 60 (19) 13
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Construction (Pile Installation) \2\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TPP (Cancelled/withdrawn)......... 24-inch Octagonal --Impact Hammer...... (1) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0
Mooring Wharf..................... Concrete. --High-pressure Water (3) 3 (80) 48 (27) 16
Jetting.
Ramp Pier & Intermediate Support (21) 12 (7) 4
Structure.
----------------------
Total Piles Installed......... ..................... ..................... ....... (107) 60 (40) 20
-----------
Total In-Water Pile ..................... ..................... ....... ......... (59) 33
Extraction/Installation
Days.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
\1\ While other methods of pile extraction are possible, cutting off the piles at mudline is the most likely
method that will be used to extract piles though vibratory extraction equipment could be used if conditions
warrant. No Level A/B take analysis conducted on the other pile extraction methods.
\2\ Impact pile installation is the most likely method that will be used to install piles. High-pressure water
jetting may be used either separately from, or at the same time as, impact pile installation.
\3\ The removal of the piles at the Mooring Wharf are dependent on interferences during the installation of new
piles. The anticipated quantity of removed piles is small and will not exceed the listed values.
Underwater demolition activities covered under this IHA application
would occur over a period of 13 days at two primary locations: (1) the
Mole Pier mooring wharf and (2) the Ramp Pier. Piles at the mooring
wharf will only be removed if they obstruct installation of new piles.
All of the piles that support the Ramp Pier are slated for removal and
replacement in the course of constructing a new replacement pier. At
both locations, the concrete pier deck would be saw cut longitudinally
and transversely at mid-span of every bent, allowing for removal in
large but manageable sections, with weights of less than 50 tons (45
metric tons). While the section is rigged to the derrick crane, a
hydraulic shearing tool attached to a barge-mounted excavator would be
used to cut the piles just below pile cap. Once freed from the piles,
the sections would be set onto a barge. Following the removal of the
pier deck, the piles could be removed via multiple methods, including
vibratory extraction, high-pressure water jetting, hydraulic pile
clipper, wire saw, underwater chain saw, dead pull or via a combination
of methods. Up to fifty-four 24-by-24-inch square concrete piles and
seven 24-inch octagonal concrete piles would be removed from the area
of the existing mooring wharf and the Ramp Pier.
Any of the pile extraction activities cited above may occur as part
of the Project-related activities. However, given that the methods
other than vibratory pile extraction entail lower source levels, we
assume that take will not result. Vibratory pile driving is the only
demolition-related activity expected to potentially result in
incidental Level B harassment and subsequent take of marine mammals.
Pile installation activities would require 33 days. Similar to pile
extraction activities, pile installation activities for the Project are
broken up into separate phases: (1) installation of forty-eight 24-inch
octagonal concrete piles at the mooring wharf; and (2) installation of
twelve 24-inch octagonal concrete piles associated with the Ramp Pier
and Intermediate Support Structure for personnel and vehicle access to
the FDD. Piles installed for the mooring wharf and the Ramp Pier/
Intermediate Support Structure would occur via an impact pile driver,
high-pressure water jetting, or a combination of both methods.
Vibratory pile installation is not expected.
The relocation of assets, dredging and sediment disposal, utility
modifications, above-water demolition activities, and placement and
operation of the FDD does not have the potential to result in
harassment under the MMPA. Underwater sound associated with pile
extraction and installation would have the potential to harass marine
mammals. The demolition and construction elements analyzed in the IHA
are described below and would occur over 33 days of in-water work over
the 1 year period of authorization.
Mitigation, monitoring, and reporting measures are described in
detail later in this document (please see Mitigation and Monitoring and
Reporting).
Comments and Responses
A notice of NMFS' proposal to issue an IHA to the Navy was
published in the Federal Register on July 21, 2023 (88 FR 47111). That
notice described, in detail, the Navy's activities, the marine mammal
species that may be affected by the activities, and the anticipated
effects on marine mammals. In that notice, we requested public input on
the request for authorization described therein, our analyses, the
proposed authorization, and any other aspect of the notice of proposed
IHA, and requested that interested persons submit relevant information,
suggestions, and comments. This proposed notice was available for a 30-
day public comment period. NMFS received no public comments.
Changes From the Proposed IHA to Final IHA
The Navy provided information about additional changes to project
design and implementation, foregoing the six-pile Test Pile Program
described in the proposed IHA Federal Register notice. After further
review, the Navy now expects most piles to be removed by clipping them
at the mud line, rather than vibratory extraction. In addition, the
total number of construction piles to be installed has been reduced
from 107 to 60 and the number of piles slated for removal has been
revised downward from 65 to 60. There will be a commensurate reduction
in in-water workdays, from 59 to 33. Pile types, methods of removal and
installation and project footprint are otherwise
[[Page 68578]]
unchanged. Due to the possibility of further adjustments to
construction of the project, the Navy requests that the take estimates
cited in the proposed IHA carry forward, and NMFS concurs with this
request. There are no other changes. Therefore, NMFS has determined
that the project changes do not affect the preliminary small numbers
finding or negligible impact determination.
Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of Specified Activities
The request provides information about marine mammals that are
known to occur in the broader geographic region including near the
mouth of San Diego Bay and North Bay. Based on monitoring of prior
projects conducted at Navy Base San Diego and in the vicinity of the
FDD project, three of the species discussed are most likely to occur in
the project area: California sea lions, bottlenose dolphins, and harbor
seals.
Sections 3 and 4 of the application summarize available information
regarding status and trends, distribution and habitat preferences, and
behavior and life history of the potentially affected species. NMFS
fully considered all of this information, and we refer the reader to
these descriptions, instead of reprinting the information. Additional
information regarding population trends and threats may be found in
NMFS' Stock Assessment Reports (SARs; https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments) and
more general information about these species (e.g., physical and
behavioral descriptions) may be found on NMFS' website (https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/find-species).
Table 2 lists all species or stocks for which take is expected and
proposed to be authorized for this activity, and summarizes information
related to the population or stock, including regulatory status under
the MMPA and Endangered Species Act (ESA) and Potential Biological
Removal (PBR), where known. PBR is defined by the MMPA as the maximum
number of animals, not including natural mortalities, that may be
removed from a marine mammal stock while allowing that stock to reach
or maintain its optimum sustainable population (as described in NMFS'
SARs). While no serious injury or mortality is anticipated or proposed
to be authorized here, PBR and annual serious injury and mortality from
anthropogenic sources are included here as gross indicators of the
status of the species or stocks and other threats.
Marine mammal abundance estimates presented in the table represent
the total number of individuals that make up a given stock. NMFS' stock
abundance estimates for most species represent the total estimate of
individuals within the geographic area, if known, that comprises that
stock. All managed stocks in this region are assessed in NMFS' U.S.
Pacific SARs. All values presented in Table 2 are the most recent
available at the time of publication and are available online at:
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments.
Table 2--Marine Mammal Species Likely Impacted by the Specified Activities \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ESA/MMPA status; Stock abundance (CV,
Common name Scientific name Stock strategic (Y/N) Nmin, most recent PBR Annual M/
\2\ abundance survey) \3\ SI \4\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Odontoceti (toothed whales, dolphins, and porpoises)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Delphinidae
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bottlenose dolphin.................. Tursiops truncatus..... California coastal..... N 453................... 2.7 >2.0
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Order Carnivora--Pinnipedia
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Otariidae (eared seals and sea lions)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California Sea Lion................. Zalophus californianus. United States.......... N 257,606............... 14,011 >321
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Family Phocidae (earless seals)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harbor seal......................... Phoca vitulina......... California............. N 30,968................ 1,641 43
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Information on the classification of marine mammal species can be found on the web page for The Society for Marine Mammalogy's Committee on Taxonomy
(https://marinemammalscience.org/science-and-publications/list-marine-mammal-species-subspecies/; Committee on Taxonomy (2022)).
\2\ Endangered Species Act (ESA) status: Endangered (E), Threatened (T)/MMPA status: Depleted (D). A dash (-) indicates that the species is not listed
under the ESA or designated as depleted under the MMPA. Under the MMPA, a strategic stock is one for which the level of direct human-caused mortality
exceeds PBR or which is determined to be declining and likely to be listed under the ESA within the foreseeable future. Any species or stock listed
under the ESA is automatically designated under the MMPA as depleted and as a strategic stock.
\3\ NMFS marine mammal stock assessment reports online at: www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/. CV is coefficient of variation, Nmin is the minimum estimate of
stock abundance. In some cases, CV is not applicable.
\4\ These values, found in NMFS's SARs, represent annual levels of human-caused mortality plus serious injury from all sources combined (e.g.,
commercial fisheries, vessel strike). Annual M/SI often cannot be determined precisely and is in some cases presented as a minimum value or range. A
CV associated with estimated mortality due to commercial fisheries is presented in some cases.
As indicated above, the 3 species in Table 2 temporally and
spatially co-occur with the activity to the degree that take is
reasonably likely to occur. Based on many years of observations and
numerous Navy-funded surveys in San Diego Bay (Merkel and Associates,
Inc., 2008; Sorensen and Swope, 2010; Graham and Saunders, 2014; Tierra
Data Inc., 2016), other marine mammals rarely occur south of the
Coronado Bay Bridge, are not known to occur near Naval Base San Diego,
and any occurrence in the project area would be very rare. Therefore,
while common dolphins (Delphinus delphis and Delphinus capensis), and
gray whales (Eschrictius robustus) have been sighted in North Bay and
reported near the mouth of San Diego Bay respectively (Naval Facilities
Engineering Command, Southwest and Port of San Diego Bay, 2013), they
are not anticipated to occur in the project area and no take of these
species is anticipated or proposed to be authorized.
Marine Mammal Hearing
Hearing is the most important sensory modality for marine mammals
underwater, and exposure to anthropogenic sound can have deleterious
effects. To appropriately
[[Page 68579]]
assess the potential effects of exposure to sound, it is necessary to
understand the frequency ranges marine mammals are able to hear. Not
all marine mammal species have equal hearing capabilities (e.g.,
Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok and Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings,
2008). To reflect this, Southall et al. (2007, 2019) recommended that
marine mammals be divided into hearing groups based on directly
measured (behavioral or auditory evoked potential techniques) or
estimated hearing ranges (behavioral response data, anatomical
modeling, etc.). Note that no direct measurements of hearing ability
have been successfully completed for mysticetes (i.e., low-frequency
cetaceans). Subsequently, NMFS (2018) described generalized hearing
ranges for these marine mammal hearing groups. Generalized hearing
ranges were chosen based on the approximately 65 decibel (dB) threshold
from the normalized composite audiograms, with the exception for lower
limits for low-frequency cetaceans where the lower bound was deemed to
be biologically implausible and the lower bound from Southall et al.
(2007) retained. Marine mammal hearing groups and their associated
hearing ranges are provided in Table 3.
Table 3--Marine Mammal Hearing Groups
[NMFS, 2018]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hearing group Generalized hearing range *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low-frequency (LF) cetaceans (baleen 7 Hz to 35 kHz.
whales).
Mid-frequency (MF) cetaceans 150 Hz to 160 kHz.
(dolphins, toothed whales, beaked
whales, bottlenose whales).
High-frequency (HF) cetaceans (true 275 Hz to 160 kHz.
porpoises, Kogia, river dolphins,
Cephalorhynchid, Lagenorhynchus
cruciger & L. australis).
Phocid pinnipeds (PW) (underwater) 50 Hz to 86 kHz.
(true seals).
Otariid pinnipeds (OW) (underwater) 60 Hz to 39 kHz.
(sea lions and fur seals).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Represents the generalized hearing range for the entire group as a
composite (i.e., all species within the group), where individual
species' hearing ranges are typically not as broad. Generalized
hearing range chosen based on ~65 dB threshold from normalized
composite audiogram, with the exception for lower limits for LF
cetaceans (Southall et al., 2007) and PW pinniped (approximation).
The pinniped functional hearing group was modified from Southall et
al. (2007) on the basis of data indicating that phocid species have
consistently demonstrated an extended frequency range of hearing
compared to otariids, especially in the higher frequency range
(Hemil[auml] et al., 2006; Kastelein et al., 2009; Reichmuth and Holt,
2013).
For more detail concerning these groups and associated frequency
ranges, please see NMFS (2018) for a review of available information.
Potential Effects of Specified Activities on Marine Mammals and Their
Habitat
The effects of underwater noise from the Navy's construction
activities have the potential to result in behavioral harassment of
marine mammals in the vicinity of the project area. The notice of the
proposed IHA (88 FR 47111, July 21, 2023) included a discussion of the
effects of anthropogenic noise on marine mammals and the potential
effects of underwater noise from the Navy's construction activities on
marine mammals and their habitat. That information and analysis was
considered in these final IHA determinations and is not repeated here;
please refer to the Federal Register notice of proposed IHA (88 FR
47111, July 21, 2023).
Estimated Take of Marine Mammals
This section provides an estimate of the number of incidental takes
authorized through the IHA, which will inform both NMFS' consideration
of ``small numbers,'' and the negligible impact determinations.
Harassment is the only type of take expected to result from these
activities. Except with respect to certain activities not pertinent
here, section 3(18) of the MMPA defines ``harassment'' as any act of
pursuit, torment, or annoyance, which (i) has the potential to injure a
marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild (Level A harassment);
or (ii) has the potential to disturb a marine mammal or marine mammal
stock in the wild by causing disruption of behavioral patterns,
including, but not limited to, migration, breathing, nursing, breeding,
feeding, or sheltering (Level B harassment).
Here, authorized takes are by Level B harassment only, in the form
behavioral response to noise, or short-term disruption of behavioral
patterns resulting from exposure to sound generated during pile driving
and extraction activities. Based on the nature of the activity, Level A
harassment is neither anticipated nor authorized. As described
previously, no serious injury or mortality is anticipated or authorized
for this activity. Below, we describe how the take numbers are
estimated.
For acoustic impacts, generally speaking, we estimate take by
considering: (1) acoustic thresholds above which NMFS believes the best
available science indicates marine mammals will be behaviorally
harassed or incur some degree of permanent hearing impairment; (2) the
area or volume of water that will be ensonified above these levels in a
day; (3) the density or occurrence of marine mammals within these
ensonified areas; and, (4) the number of days of activities. We note
that while these factors can contribute to a basic calculation to
provide an initial prediction of potential takes, additional
information that can qualitatively inform take estimates is also
sometimes available (e.g., previous monitoring results or average group
size). Below, we describe the factors considered here in more detail
and present the take estimates.
Acoustic Thresholds
NMFS recommends the use of acoustic thresholds that identify the
received level of underwater sound above which exposed marine mammals
would be reasonably expected to be behaviorally harassed (equated to
Level B harassment) or to incur auditory permanent threshold shift
(PTS) of some degree (equated to Level A harassment).
Level B harassment is largely driven by received level, the onset
of behavioral disturbance from anthropogenic noise exposure is also
informed to varying degrees by other factors related to the source or
exposure context (e.g., frequency, predictability, duty cycle, duration
of the exposure, signal-to-noise ratio, distance to the source), the
environment (e.g., bathymetry, other noises in the area, predators in
the area), and the receiving animals (hearing, motivation, experience,
demography, life stage, depth) and can be difficult to predict (e.g.,
Southall et al., 2007, 2021; Ellison
[[Page 68580]]
et al., 2012). Based on what the available science indicates and the
practical need to use a threshold based on a metric that is both
predictable and measurable for most activities, NMFS typically uses a
generalized acoustic threshold based on received level to estimate the
onset of behavioral harassment. NMFS generally predicts that marine
mammals are likely to be behaviorally harassed in a manner considered
to be Level B harassment when exposed to underwater anthropogenic noise
above root-mean-squared pressure received levels (RMS SPL) of 120 dB
(referenced to 1 micropascal (re 1 [mu]Pa)) for continuous (e.g.,
vibratory pile driving, drilling) sources, and above RMS SPL 160 dB re
1 [mu]Pa for non-explosive impulsive (e.g., seismic airguns) or
intermittent (e.g., scientific sonar) sources. Generally speaking,
Level B harassment take estimates based on these behavioral harassment
thresholds are expected to include any likely takes by temporary
threshold shift (TTS) as, in most cases, the likelihood of TTS occurs
at distances from the source less than those at which behavioral
harassment is likely. TTS of a sufficient degree can manifest as
behavioral harassment, as reduced hearing sensitivity and the potential
reduced opportunities to detect important signals (masking of
vocalization/conspecific communication, predators, prey) may result in
changes in behavior patterns that would not otherwise occur.
The specified activity includes the use of continuous (vibratory
pile extraction) and impulsive (impact pile driving) sources, and
therefore the RMS SPL thresholds of 120 and 160 dB re 1 [mu]Pa would
typically be applicable. However, as discussed above, the Navy has
established that the ambient noise in the project area is 126 dB re 1
mPa (rms). Since this is louder than the 120 dB threshold for
continuous sources, 126 dB becomes the effective threshold for Level B
harassment for continuous sources.
Level A harassment is described in detail in NMFS' Technical
Guidance for Assessing the Effects of Anthropogenic Sound on Marine
Mammal Hearing (Version 2.0) (Technical Guidance, 2018). The Technical
Guidance identifies dual criteria to assess auditory injury (Level A
harassment) to five different marine mammal groups (based on hearing
sensitivity) as a result of exposure to noise from two different types
of sources (impulsive or non-impulsive). The Navy's specified activity
includes the use of both impulsive (impact pile driving) and non-
impulsive (vibratory extraction) sources.
The Level A harassment thresholds are provided in the table below.
The references, analysis, and methodology used in the development of
the thresholds are described in NMFS' 2018 Technical Guidance, which
may be accessed at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-acoustic-technical-guidance.
No project activities are expected to approach levels that may
induce PTS or other injury, and no take by Level A harassment is
expected or authorized.
Table 4--Thresholds Identifying the Onset of Permanent Threshold Shift
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PTS onset acoustic thresholds (received level)
Hearing group ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impulsive Non-impulsive
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Low-Frequency (LF) Cetaceans........... Cell 1: Lpk,flat: 219 dB; Cell 2: LE,LF,24h: 199 dB.
LE,LF,24h: 183 dB.
Mid-Frequency (MF) Cetaceans........... Cell 3: Lpk,flat: 230 dB; Cell 4: LE,MF,24h: 198 dB.
LE,MF,24h: 185 dB.
High-Frequency (HF) Cetaceans.......... Cell 5: Lpk,flat: 202 dB; Cell 6: LE,HF,24h: 173 dB.
LE,HF,24h: 155 dB.
Phocid Pinnipeds (PW) (Underwater)..... Cell 7: Lpk,flat: 218 dB; Cell 8: LE,PW,24h: 201 dB.
LE,PW,24h: 185 dB.
Otariid Pinnipeds (OW) (Underwater).... Cell 9: Lpk,flat: 232 dB; Cell 10: LE,OW,24h: 219 dB.
LE,OW,24h: 203 dB.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ensonified Area
Here, we describe the parameters of the specified activity used to
estimate the ensonified area and application of related acoustic
thresholds, including source levels and transmission loss coefficient.
The ensonified area associated with Level A harassment is more
technically challenging to predict due to the need to account for a
duration component. Therefore, NMFS developed an optional User
Spreadsheet tool to accompany the Technical Guidance that can be used
to relatively simply predict an isopleth distance for use in
conjunction with marine mammal density or occurrence to help predict
potential takes. We note that because of some of the assumptions
included in the methods underlying this optional tool, we anticipate
that the resulting isopleth estimates are typically going to be
overestimates of some degree, which may result in an overestimate of
potential take by Level A harassment. However, this optional tool
offers the best way to estimate isopleth distances when more
sophisticated modeling methods are not available or practical. For
stationary sources (such as pile driving and removal), the optional
User Spreadsheet tool predicts the distance at which, if a marine
mammal remained at that distance for the duration of the activity, it
would be expected to incur PTS. Inputs used in the optional User
Spreadsheet tool, and the resulting estimated isopleths, are reported
below.
Table 5--Calculated Extent of Level A and Level B Harassment Zones
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level A harassment zones \2\ (meters) Level B harassment zones
Pile size/type & --------------------------------------- \2\ (meters)
Activity description source levels Coastal ----------------------------
\1\ California Harbor bottlenose
sea lions seals dolphins All species
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Extraction \3\.. 24-inch 0.0 6.8 1.0 \5\ 3,525 x 1,055
octagonal/
square concrete
(Production)
(162 RMS).
24-inch 0.0 2.3 0.3
octagonal
concrete (TPP)
\4\ (162 RMS).
Impact Driving \6\........ 24-inch 0.0 28.0 1.9 375
octagonal
concrete (TPP)
\4\ (188 Peak,
176 RMS, 166
SEL).
[[Page 68581]]
24-inch 0.0 58.2 3.9
octagonal
concrete
(Production)
(188 Peak, 176
RMS, 166 SEL).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Sound source levels at 10 meters (m) (33 ft.) distance. Units for Peak and RMS are dB re 1 [micro]Pa. The
unit for sound exposure level (SEL) is dB 1 [micro]Pa\2\-sec.
\2\ Level A distances are based on a site-specific model for California sea lions (Dall'Osto and Dahl, 2019) and
a generic Practical Spreading Loss model (NMFS, 2018, 2020) for harbor seals and coastal bottlenose dolphins.
The Level A harassment criteria are not exceeded for California sea lions based on the site-specific model
(Dall'Osto and Dahl, 2019). Level B harassment distances are based on the site-specific model (Dall'Osto and
Dahl, 2019). No take by Level A harassment is requested or proposed for authorization.
\3\ Assumes 20 minutes of vibratory pile extraction, Weighting Factor Adjustment of 2.5 kHz, with 5 piles/day
for Production, and 1 pile/day for the TPP.
\4\ The TPP Piles will be installed via an impact hammer prior to the production piles, re-struck for testing
approximately 1 week later, and then removed prior to the start of production pile driving.
\5\ The distances represent the maximum north/south and east/west distance from the pile being driven. These
distances are represented by the green line in Figure 6-1 of the Navy's application.
\6\ Assumes 600 strikes per pile, 0.01 second single-strike duration, Weighting Factor Adjustment of 2.0 kHz,
with 3 piles/day for Production, and 1 pile/day for the TPP.
Marine Mammal Occurrence
In this section we provide information about the occurrence of
marine mammals, including density or other relevant information which
will inform the take calculations. In the case of the Navy's FDD
project, monitoring results from nearby projects provide the best
available information about marine mammal presence and abundance in the
project area. Accordingly, for purposes of estimating density of
species that may occur in the project area, sightings collected in the
course of monitoring projects for work at other locations within the
bounds of NBSD are used.
Due to the dynamic nature and multitude of overlapping uses of the
north and north-central San Diego Bay, a number of marine mammal
surveys have been conducted (Merkel and Associates, Inc., 2008;
Sorensen and Swope, 2010; Graham and Saunders 2014; Naval Facilities
Engineering Command, Southwest (NAVFAC SW) 2018b). Based on these
surveys California sea lions are the predominant species observed.
However, relative to the FDD project area, only one dedicated line
transect survey (Sorensen and Swope, 2010) surveyed an area south of
the Coronado Bridge. During the Sorensen and Swope (2010) survey, two
sightings of one California sea lion each were reported in the water
adjacent to NBSD. As presented in the NBSD Pier 6 Replacement Project's
first year's interim report (NAVFAC SW, 2022) a clearer picture of
marine mammal activity south of the Coronado Bay Bridge was developed
during 132 days of observations. This recent monitoring effort found
that California sea lions were the most common species observed south
of the Coronado Bridge (69.9 percent), but coastal bottlenose dolphins
(29.5 percent), and to a lesser extent harbor seals (0.6 percent), were
observed as well. The Pier 6 Replacement Project data represents the
best available science for an area that is close to the project area
described here. Accordingly, the application uses these prior
observations from the immediate vicinity as a basis for assessing
potential project impacts to California sea lions, coastal bottlenose
dolphins, and harbor seals by leveraging the numbers provided in NAVFAC
SW (2022).
Take Estimation
Here, we describe how the information provided in the application
was synthesized to produce the quantitative estimate of the take that
informed the authorization. Changes described in Changes from the
Proposed IHA to Final IHA above are expected to reduce the effects
described below. However, due to the potential for further changes that
may arise during construction, the Navy requests that the higher take
estimates that follow below, and that were developed based on the
construction methods and materials described in the initial
application.
The degree to which underwater noise propagates away from a noise
source is dependent on a variety of factors, most notably by bathymetry
and the presence or absence of reflective or absorptive conditions,
including the sea surface and sediment type. The two models used to
assess the potential distances to regulatory thresholds and to evaluate
the potential for Level A/B harassment: (Dall'Osto and Dahl 2019; NMFS
2018, 2020), and a Practical Spreading Loss model (PSL). Dall'Osto and
Dahl (2019) developed site-relevant acoustic models using point sources
at three locations (Pier 1, Pier 6 and Pier 13) along the eastern
extent of the south-central San Diego Bay on NBSD. Due to the similar
bathymetry and location with respect to the channel, the Pier 13
modeling location, which is roughly 725 meters to the south of the
Project location approximates the sound propagation profile from a
notional source at the Mole Pier mooring wharf FFD location. Key to
this profile is the dampening effect of sound due to the western slope
of the dredged navigation channel, as well as channelization of sound
to the north and south within the channel. While the Pier 13 point is
not exactly in the project location, the model provides suitable
representation of sound propagation in the project area with a higher
degree of resolution than a generic PSL model would provide.
Harbor seals and coastal bottlenose dolphins were not included in
the site-specific modeling effort for Level A harassment isopleth
calculations. As a result, the NMFS user spreadsheet (NMFS 2020) was
used to determine Level A harassment zones for these species. To
determine zones for potential Level B harassment, the site-specific
model was used for all species because the threshold criteria for Level
B harassment are based solely on continuous or impulsive noise source
and are not frequency-dependent.
[[Page 68582]]
Table 6--Estimated Takes From Level B Harassment
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expected Instances of
average Requested \1\ Stock take as
Species individuals Level B take abundance percent of
per day stock
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California sea lion................................ 2 118 257, 606 0.05%
Harbor seal........................................ 1 59 30,968 0.19%
Coastal bottlenose dolphin......................... 1 59 453 13%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Based on 59 days of pile driving activity.
Mitigation
In order to issue an IHA under section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA,
NMFS must set forth the permissible methods of taking pursuant to the
activity, and other means of effecting the least practicable impact on
the species or stock and its habitat, paying particular attention to
rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar significance, and on
the availability of the species or stock for taking for certain
subsistence uses (latter not applicable for this action). NMFS
regulations require applicants for incidental take authorizations to
include information about the availability and feasibility (economic
and technological) of equipment, methods, and manner of conducting the
activity or other means of effecting the least practicable adverse
impact upon the affected species or stocks, and their habitat (50 CFR
216.104(a)(11)).
In evaluating how mitigation may or may not be appropriate to
ensure the least practicable adverse impact on species or stocks and
their habitat, as well as subsistence uses where applicable, NMFS
considers two primary factors:
(1) The manner in which, and the degree to which, the successful
implementation of the measure(s) is expected to reduce impacts to
marine mammals, marine mammal species or stocks, and their habitat.
This considers the nature of the potential adverse impact being
mitigated (likelihood, scope, range). It further considers the
likelihood that the measure will be effective if implemented
(probability of accomplishing the mitigating result if implemented as
planned), the likelihood of effective implementation (probability
implemented as planned), and;
(2) The practicability of the measures for applicant
implementation, which may consider such things as cost, impact on
operations.
The following mitigation measures are required in order to avoid
and minimize the potential for Level A harassment and to reduce, to the
lowest extent practicable, exposure to noise exceeding Level B
harassment criteria. The contractor is responsible for complying with
all the mitigation measures listed below, whereas on-site Navy
representatives will monitor the contractor's performance and require
corrective action or stop work, if necessary, to ensure that
requirements are met.
(1) Time Restriction: The Navy plans to conduct in-water pile
extraction/installation activities only when sufficient ambient light
is available for visual observations (generally 30 minutes after
sunrise and up to 45 minutes before sunset); however, the Lead
Protected Species Observer will make a final determination as to when
to start or stop activities based on ambient lighting conditions.
(2) General Vessel and Machinery Stoppage: For in-water activities,
including heavy machinery activities other than pile extraction/
installation (e.g., barge movements) or when using vessels, if a marine
mammal comes within 10 m (33 ft.), the activity must cease operations
and/or reduce vessel speed to the minimum level required to maintain
steerage and safe working conditions.
(3) Pre-Construction Briefing: Prior to the start of all in-water
pile installation or extraction activities, briefings will be conducted
for construction supervisors and crews, the monitoring team and when
new personnel join the work. The briefing will explain
responsibilities, communication procedures, the marine mammal
protocols, and operational procedures for stopping/delaying in-water
activities.
(4) Protected Marine Species Visual Monitoring: Marine Species
Visual Monitoring will assess and document any effects on marine
mammals. PSOs will visually observe the surrounding waters for marine
mammal presence, assess any potential Level B harassment and ensure
effective notification of any animals sighted in established shutdown
zones.
Monitoring will take place from 30 minutes prior to
initiation through 30 minutes post-completion of pile extraction/
installation activities;
During all observation periods, the PSOs will use
binoculars and/or the naked eye to search continuously for protected
marine species;
Shutdown zone(s) may only be declared clear, and pile
extraction/installation started, when the entire shutdown zone is
visible (i.e., when not obscured by a poor light, rain, fog, etc.). If
the applicable shutdown zone is obscured by fog or poor lighting
conditions, activity at the location will not be initiated until the
shutdown zone is visible.
(4) All observers shall have no other project-related tasks while
recording data to address the following requirements:
a. Date and time that pile extraction/installation begins or ends;
b. Construction activities occurring during each observation
period;
c. Weather parameters (e.g., wind, temperature, percent cloud
cover, and visibility);
d. Tide stage and sea state (The Beaufort Sea State Scale will be
used to determine sea-state);
e. Species, numbers, and, if possible, sex and age class of marine
mammals;
f. Marine mammal behavior patterns observed, including bearing and
direction of travel, and if possible, the correlation to Sound Pressure
Levels;
g. Distance from pile installation activities to marine mammals and
distance of a sighted marine mammal from the observation point;
h. Locations of all PSOs; and
i. Other, relevant human activity in the area.
(5) Soft Start: The use of soft-start procedures for impact pile
driving are expected to provide additional protection to marine mammals
by providing a warning and/or giving marine mammals a chance to leave
the area prior to the hammer operating at full capacity.
6. Shutdown Zones:
[[Page 68583]]
Table 7--Shutdown Zones
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shutdown zones (meters)
--------------------------------------
Activity description Pile size/type & source Coastal
levels California Harbor bottlenose
sea lions seals dolphins
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vibratory Extraction......................... 24-inch octagonal/square 10 10 10
concrete (Production)
(162 RMS).
24-inch octagonal concrete 10 10 10
(TPP) (162 RMS).
Impact Driving............................... 24-inch octagonal concrete 10 30 10
(TPP) (188 Peak, 176 RMS,
166 SEL).
24-inch octagonal concrete 10 60 10
(Production) (188 Peak,
176 RMS, 166 SEL).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the activity and species observed shutdown zones
will be established around in-water pile extraction/installation
activities to avoid the potential for Level A harassment of marine
mammals.
One Pier-based PSO will be stationed with clear view of
the shutdown zone(s) and will be responsible for initiating shutdowns/
delays of project activities, monitoring for animals in close proximity
to the project site, and the collection of project-related activity
data (i.e., pile extraction/installation start and stop times,
shutdowns/delays);
Visual surveys will occur for at least 30 minutes prior to
the start of pile extraction/installation;
If marine mammals covered under the IHA are present within
the Level B harassment zone, in-water construction or demolition will
be allowed to start without delay.
If a marine mammal covered in the IHA enters an applicable
shutdown zone, all pile extraction/installation activities at that
location shall be delayed. The animal(s) shall be allowed to remain in
the shutdown zone (i.e., must leave of their own volition) and their
behavior must be monitored and documented. Work will be allowed to
start once the animal has been observed either leaving the shutdown
area, or 15 minutes has elapsed since the last observation without re-
detection of the animal;
If a marine mammal covered in the IHA enters the
applicable shutdown zone, the PSO shall direct a halt of all pile
extraction/installation activities at that location and initiate
mitigation. The animal(s) must be allowed to remain in the shutdown
zone (i.e., must leave of their own volition) and their behavior must
be monitored and documented. Work may restart once the animal has been
observed either leaving the shutdown area, or 15 minutes has elapsed
since the last observation without re-detection of a marine mammal;
If a marine mammal not covered in the IHA enters the
applicable Level B harassment zone, all pile extraction/installation
activities shall be halted. The animal(s) must be allowed to remain in
the Level B harassment zone (i.e., must leave of their own volition)
and their behavior must be monitored and documented. Work will be
allowed to restart once the animal has been observed either leaving the
Level B harassment zone, or 60 minutes has elapsed since the last
observation without re-detection of the animal; and
In the unlikely event that environmental conditions, such
as heavy fog, prevent the visual detection of marine mammals within the
shutdown zone (see Table 7), in-water demolition or construction
activities will not be initiated. If in-water demolition or
construction activities have been initiated, and conditions deteriorate
so that the shutdown zone is not completely visible, then activities
will be delayed until the zone is fully visible.
Based on our evaluation of these measures NMFS has determined that
the required mitigation measures provide the means of effecting the
least practicable impact on the affected species or stocks and their
habitat, paying particular attention to rookeries, mating grounds, and
areas of similar significance.
Monitoring and Reporting
In order to issue an IHA for an activity, section 101(a)(5)(D) of
the MMPA states that NMFS must set forth requirements pertaining to the
monitoring and reporting of such taking. The MMPA implementing
regulations at 50 CFR 216.104(a)(13) indicate that requests for
authorizations must include the suggested means of accomplishing the
necessary monitoring and reporting that will result in increased
knowledge of the species and of the level of taking or impacts on
populations of marine mammals that are expected to be present while
conducting the activities. Effective reporting is critical both to
compliance as well as ensuring that the most value is obtained from the
required monitoring.
Monitoring and reporting requirements prescribed by NMFS should
contribute to improved understanding of one or more of the following:
Occurrence of marine mammal species or stocks in the area
in which take is anticipated (e.g., presence, abundance, distribution,
density);
Nature, scope, or context of likely marine mammal exposure
to potential stressors/impacts (individual or cumulative, acute or
chronic), through better understanding of: (1) action or environment
(e.g., source characterization, propagation, ambient noise); (2)
affected species (e.g., life history, dive patterns); (3) co-occurrence
of marine mammal species with the activity; or (4) biological or
behavioral context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or feeding areas);
Individual marine mammal responses (behavioral or
physiological) to acoustic stressors (acute, chronic, or cumulative),
other stressors, or cumulative impacts from multiple stressors;
How anticipated responses to stressors impact either: (1)
long-term fitness and survival of individual marine mammals; or (2)
populations, species, or stocks;
Effects on marine mammal habitat (e.g., marine mammal prey
species, acoustic habitat, or other important physical components of
marine mammal habitat); and
Mitigation and monitoring effectiveness.
The Navy addresses the above requirements in depth in its NMFS-
approved Marine Species Monitoring Plan and plans to implement the
following procedures:
The Navy will retain independent PSOs to collect marine mammal
sightings data, including behaviors, during site preparation in the
pre-construction period, during all in-water workdays, through
completion of in water construction and the demobilization of pile
extraction/installation extraction equipment. To eliminate the
potential for bias, all
[[Page 68584]]
marine mammal observations will be logged, regardless of proximity to
the Level A or Level B harassment zones. The efficacy of visual
detection depends on several factors including the PSO's ability to
detect the animal, the environmental conditions (visibility and sea
state), and monitoring platforms. All observers shall be trained in
marine mammal identification and behaviors, and satisfy the following
criteria:
Visual acuity in both eyes (correction is permissible)
sufficient to discern moving targets at the water's surface with
ability to estimate target size and distance. Use of binoculars or
spotting scope may be necessary to correctly identify the target.
Advanced education in biological science, wildlife
management, mammalogy or related field (Bachelor's degree or higher is
preferred), or equivalent Alaska Native traditional knowledge.
Experience and ability to conduct field observations and
collect data according to assigned protocols (this may include academic
experience).
Experience or training in the field identification of
marine mammals (cetaceans and pinnipeds).
Sufficient training, orientation or experience with vessel
operation and pile driving operations to provide for personal safety
during observations.
Writing skills sufficient to prepare a report of
observations. Reports should include such information as the number,
type, and location of marine mammals observed; the behavior of marine
mammals in the area of potential sound effects during construction;
dates and times when observations and in-water construction activities
were conducted; dates and times when in-water construction activities
were suspended because of marine mammals, etc.
Ability to communicate orally, by radio or in person, with
project personnel to provide real time information on marine mammals
observed in the area and necessary actions, as needed.
General Visual Monitoring Protocols: Trained PSOs will be placed at
the best vantage point(s) practicable (e.g., the crane barge, on shore,
or any other suitable location) to monitor for marine mammals and
implement shutdown/delay procedures, when applicable, by notifying the
construction operator of a need for a work stoppage.
Marine Mammal Monitoring Protocols
Observation data will be recorded for any marine mammals
within visual range of the PSO, regardless of proximity to the
monitoring zones;
Up to three PSOs at up to three locations will conduct the
marine mammal monitoring depending on the activity and size of
monitoring zones (see Figure 1-2 of the Navy's application). All PSOs
will communicate with each other to enhance tracking of marine mammals
that may be moving through the area and to minimize duplicate
observation records of the same animal by different PSOs (i.e., a re-
sighting);
Results of all protected marine mammal observations will
be recorded on electronic tablet or hardcopy datasheets (see Appendix A
for an example of a hard-copy datasheet);
If an injured, sick, or dead marine mammal is observed,
procedures outlined in Section 3.0 of the Navy's application will be
followed:
[cir] In the event that personnel involved in the Project-related
activities discover an injured or dead marine mammal, the Navy POC for
the IHA shall report the incident to the Office of Protected Resources
(OPR), NMFS, and the Regional Stranding Coordinator as soon as
feasible;
[cir] If the death or injury was clearly caused by the specified
activity, the IHA-holder must immediately cease the specified
activities until NMFS is able to review the circumstances of the
incident and determine what, if any, additional measures are
appropriate to ensure compliance with the terms of the IHA. The IHA-
holder must not resume their activities until notified by NMFS.
[cir] The report will include the following information:
[ssquf] Time, date, and location (latitude/longitude) of the first
discovery (and updated location information if known and applicable);
[ssquf] Species identification (if known) or description of the
animal(s) involved;
[ssquf] Condition of the animal(s) (including carcass condition if
the animal is dead);
[ssquf] Observed behavior of the animal(s), if alive;
[ssquf] If available, photographs or video footage of the
animal(s); and
[ssquf] General circumstances under which the animal was
discovered.
[cir] In the event that an injured or dead marine mammal is
discovered, and the Lead PSO determines that the cause of the injury or
death is unknown and the death is relatively recent (i.e., in less than
a moderate state of decomposition as described in the next paragraph),
the PSO will report to the Navy POC;
[cir] Within 24 hours, the Navy POC will report the incident to the
NBSD Base Biologist, the NMFS OPR, and the appropriate West Coast
Region Marine Mammal Network Stranding Coordinators as noted above;
[cir] The report will include the same information identified
above. Pursuant to NMFS instruction and approval, activities may
continue while the circumstances of the incident are under review;
[cir] In the event that an injured or dead marine mammal is
discovered, and the Lead PSO determines that the injury or death is not
a result of activities authorized in the IHA (i.e., previously wounded
animal, carcass with moderate to advanced decomposition, or scavenger
damage), the Lead PSO will report the incident to the Navy POC, who
will report the animal(s) to the NBSD base biologist;
[cir] The appropriate West Coast Region Marine Mammal Network
Stranding Coordinators, as noted above, will be notified within 24
hours of the discovery;
[cir] The PSOs will provide photographs or video footage (if
available) or other documentation of the stranded animal sighting to
the Navy POC under such a case; and
[cir] At no time should the PSO handle, or attempt to handle, a
dead marine mammal.
Pre-Construction Monitoring
Visual surveys will occur for at least 30 minutes prior to the
start of pile extraction/installation and mitigation measures will be
initiated as described above.
Monitoring Concurrent With Construction
If a marine mammal approaches, or appears to be
approaching, the shutdown zone(s), the PSO who first observed the
animal will alert the ``Command'' PSO, who will notify the construction
crew of the animal's current status. In-water activities addressed in
the IHA will be allowed to continue while the animal remains outside
the shutdown zone;
If shutdown and/or clearance procedures would result in an
imminent concern for human safety, then the activity will be allowed to
continue until the safety concern is addressed. During that timeframe,
the animal(s) will be continuously monitored, and the Navy POC will be
notified and consulted prior to re-initiation of Project-related
activities; and
Regardless of location within the Level B harassment zone,
an initial behavior and the location of the animal(s) will be logged.
Behaviors will be continually logged until the animal is either passed
off to another PSO, the
[[Page 68585]]
animal is no longer visible, or it has left the Level B harassment
zone.
Post-Activity Monitoring
Monitoring of all zones will continue for 30 minutes
following completion of pile extraction/installation and drilling
activities. These surveys will record all marine mammal observations
following the same procedures as identified for the pre-construction
monitoring time-period, and will focus on observing and reporting
unusual or abnormal behaviors; and
A summary report of recorded observations, work stoppages
(if any) and an assessment of (1) effectiveness of mitigation and (2)
recommendations for adjustment to future monitoring protocols will be
required within 90 days of project completion or expiration of an IHA.
Negligible Impact Analysis and Determination
NMFS has defined negligible impact as an impact resulting from the
specified activity that cannot be reasonably expected to, and is not
reasonably likely to, adversely affect the species or stock through
effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival (50 CFR 216.103). A
negligible impact finding is based on the lack of likely adverse
effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival (i.e., population-
level effects). An estimate of the number of takes alone is not enough
information on which to base an impact determination. In addition to
considering estimates of the number of marine mammals that might be
``taken'' through harassment, NMFS considers other factors, such as the
likely nature of any impacts or responses (e.g., intensity, duration),
the context of any impacts or responses (e.g., critical reproductive
time or location, foraging impacts affecting energetics), as well as
effects on habitat, and the likely effectiveness of the mitigation. We
also assess the number, intensity, and context of estimated takes by
evaluating this information relative to population status. Consistent
with the 1989 preamble for NMFS' implementing regulations (54 FR 40338,
September 29, 1989), the impacts from other past and ongoing
anthropogenic activities are incorporated into this analysis via their
impacts on the baseline (e.g., as reflected in the regulatory status of
the species, population size and growth rate where known, ongoing
sources of human-caused mortality, or ambient noise levels).
To avoid repetition, this discussion of our analysis applies to all
the species listed in Table 2, given that the anticipated effects of
this activity on these different marine mammal stocks are expected to
be similar. There is little information about the nature or severity of
the impacts, or the size, status, or structure of any of these species
or stocks that would lead to a different analysis for this activity.
The takes from Level B harassment would be due to potential
behavioral disturbance such as avoidance or temporary displacement or
temporary shift in hearing threshold. No mortality is anticipated given
the nature of the activity and measures designed to minimize the
possibility of injury to marine mammals. The potential for harassment
is minimized through the construction method and the implementation of
the planned mitigation measures (see Mitigation section).
The nature of the pile driving project precludes the likelihood of
serious injury or mortality. Take would occur within a limited,
confined area (south-central San Diego Bay) of the stock's range. The
duration and intensity of Level B harassment events will be minimized
through use of mitigation measures described herein. Further the amount
of take proposed to be authorized is extremely small when compared to
stock abundance.
Behavioral responses of marine mammals to pile driving at the
project site, if any, are expected to be mild and temporary. Marine
mammals within the Level B harassment zone may not show any visual cues
they are disturbed or could become alert, avoid the area, leave the
area, or display other mild responses that are not observable such as
changes in vocalization patterns. Given the short duration of noise-
generating activities per day and that pile driving and removal would
occur across 6 months, any harassment would be temporary. There are no
other areas or times of known biological importance for any of the
affected species.
In addition, it is unlikely that minor noise effects in a small,
localized area of habitat would have any effect on the stocks' ability
to recover. In combination, we believe that these factors, as well as
the available body of evidence from other similar activities,
demonstrate that the potential effects of the specified activities will
have only minor, short-term effects on individuals. The specified
activities are not expected to impact rates of recruitment or survival
and will therefore not result in population-level impacts.
In summary and as described above, the following factors primarily
support our determination that the impacts resulting from this activity
are not expected to adversely affect any of the species or stocks
through effects on annual rates of recruitment or survival:
No serious injury or mortality is anticipated or
authorized;
No important habitat areas have been identified within the
project area;
For all species, San Diego Bay is a peripheral part of
their range;
Among the suitable options for construction available, the
Navy will select lower-impact techniques such as vibratory pile driving
in lieu of impact driving, to the maximum extent practicable;
The Navy will adhere to standards for soft-starts when
impact driving and shut downs for all in-water activities subject to
work stoppage; and
Monitoring reports from similar work in San Diego Bay have
documented little to no effect on individuals of the same species
resulting from the specified activities.
Based on the analysis contained herein of the likely effects of the
specified activity on marine mammals and their habitat, and taking into
consideration the implementation of the proposed monitoring and
mitigation measures, NMFS finds that the total marine mammal take from
the specified activity will have a negligible impact on all affected
marine mammal species or stocks.
Small Numbers
As noted previously, only take of small numbers of marine mammals
may be authorized under sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA for
specified activities other than military readiness activities. The MMPA
does not define small numbers and so, in practice, where estimated
numbers are available, NMFS compares the number of individuals taken to
the most appropriate estimation of abundance of the relevant species or
stock in our determination of whether an authorization is limited to
small numbers of marine mammals. When the predicted number of
individuals to be taken is fewer than one-third of the species or stock
abundance, the take is considered to be of small numbers. Additionally,
other qualitative factors may be considered in the analysis, such as
the temporal or spatial scale of the activities.
The amount of take NMFS has authorized is below one-third of the
estimated stock abundance of the three species that may be subject to
Level B harassment from the proposed pile driving and extraction
activities.
These estimated takes meet the ``small numbers'' criterion given
that total
[[Page 68586]]
requested instances of take equate to no more than 13 percent of any
stock expected to be taken, less than benchmark of less than one-third
of stock abundance often used to substantiate a small numbers finding.
Comparing estimated instances of take against stock abundance for
assessment of small numbers is a conservative approach and is likely to
over-estimate the number of animals that may be affected by the
activity.
Based on the analysis contained herein of the specified activity
(including the mitigation and monitoring measures) and the anticipated
take of marine mammals, NMFS finds that small numbers of marine mammals
would be taken relative to the population size of the affected species
or stocks.
Unmitigable Adverse Impact Analysis and Determination
There are no relevant subsistence uses of the affected marine
mammal stocks or species implicated by this action. Therefore, NMFS has
determined that the total taking of affected species or stocks would
not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the availability of such
species or stocks for taking for subsistence purposes.
Endangered Species Act
Section 7(a)(2) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (ESA; 16
U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) requires that each Federal agency insure that any
action it authorizes, funds, or carries out is not likely to jeopardize
the continued existence of any endangered or threatened species or
result in the destruction or adverse modification of designated
critical habitat. To ensure ESA compliance for the issuance of IHAs,
NMFS consults internally whenever we propose to authorize take for
endangered or threatened species.
No incidental take of ESA-listed species is proposed for
authorization or expected to result from this activity. Therefore, NMFS
has determined that formal consultation under section 7 of the ESA is
not required for this action.
National Environmental Policy Act
To comply with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA;
42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and NOAA Administrative Order (NAO) 216-6A,
NMFS must review our proposed action (i.e., the issuance of an IHA)
with respect to potential impacts on the human environment. This action
is consistent with categories of activities identified in Categorical
Exclusion B4 (IHAs with no anticipated serious injury or mortality) of
the Companion Manual for NOAA Administrative Order 216-6A, which do not
individually or cumulatively have the potential for significant impacts
on the quality of the human environment and for which we have not
identified any extraordinary circumstances that would preclude this
categorical exclusion. Accordingly, NMFS has determined that the
issuance of the IHA qualifies to be categorically excluded from further
NEPA review.
Authorization
NMFS has issued an IHA to the Navy for the incidental take of
marine mammals due to in-water construction activities associated with
the Floating Dry Dock Project at Naval Base San Diego in San Diego,
California from March 1, 2024 to February 28, 2025, provided the
previously mentioned mitigation, monitoring, and reporting requirements
are incorporated.
Dated: September 28, 2023.
Kimberly Damon-Randall,
Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
[FR Doc. 2023-21920 Filed 10-3-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P