Notice of Availability of the Final Environmental Impact Statement for Caspian Tern Management To Reduce Predation of Juvenile Salmonids in the Columbia River Estuary
Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.
[Federal Register: January 14, 2005 (Volume 70, Number 10)]
[Notices]
[Page 2651-2652]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr14ja05-76]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Notice of Availability of the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for Caspian Tern Management To Reduce Predation of Juvenile
Salmonids in the Columbia River Estuary
AGENCY: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of the Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
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SUMMARY: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) announces that
the Final Environmental Impact Statement (Final EIS) for Caspian Tern
(Sterna caspia) Management to Reduce Predation of Juvenile Salmonids in
the Columbia River Estuary is available for review and comment. This
Final EIS was prepared pursuant to the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969, as amended (NEPA) with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
(Corps) and National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries) as
cooperating agencies. This Final EIS describes the three Federal
Agencies' proposal for the redistribution of the Caspian tern colony
from East Sand Island, Columbia River estuary to various sites located
throughout the Pacific Coast/Western region. The purposes of the
proposed action are to reduce tern predation on juvenile Columbia River
salmonids and eliminate the vulnerability of the regional tern
population associated with having the majority of the population (70
percent) breeding in one location.
DATES: A Record of Decision may be signed no sooner than 30 days after
publication of this notice (40 CFR 1506.10 (b) (2)).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For more information or to request a
copy of
[[Page 2652]]
the Final EIS, contact Nanette Seto or Tara Zimmerman, Migratory Birds
and Habitat Programs, 911 NE. 11th Avenue, Portland, OR, 97232,
telephone (503) 231-6164, facsimile (503) 231-2019.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Copies of the Final EIS will be available
for viewing and downloading online at:
1. http://migratorybirds.pacific.fws.gov/CATE.htm,
2. http://www.nwp.usace.army.mil/pm/e/,
and
3. http://nwr.noaa.gov.
Printed documents will also be available for review at the
following libraries:
1. North Olympic Library System, Port Angeles Branch, Port Angeles, WA,
2. North Olympic Library System, Sequim Branch, Sequim, WA,
3. Astoria Public Library, Astoria, OR,
4. Multnomah County Central Library, Portland, OR,
5. Eugene Public Library, Eugene, OR,
6. Lake County Library, Lakeview, OR,
7. San Francisco Public Library, San Francisco, CA, and
8. Oakland Main Public Library, Oakland, CA
Copies of the Final EIS may be obtained by writing to U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Migratory Birds and Habitat Programs, Attn: Nanette
Seto, 911 NE. 11th Avenue, Portland, OR, 97232, or cateeis@fws.gov.
Background
Recent increases in the number of Caspian terns nesting in the
Columbia River estuary, Oregon, have led to concerns over their
potential impact on the recovery of threatened and endangered Columbia
River salmon. In 2000, Seattle Audubon, National Audubon, American Bird
Conservancy, and Defenders of Wildlife filed a lawsuit against the
Corps alleging that compliance with NEPA for a proposed action of
relocating the large colony of Caspian terns from Rice Island to East
Sand Island was insufficient, and against the Service in objection to
the potential take of eggs as a means to prevent nesting on Rice
Island. In 2002, all parties reached a settlement agreement. The
settlement agreement stipulates that the Service, Corps, and NOAA
Fisheries prepare an EIS to address Caspian tern management in the
Columbia River estuary and juvenile salmonid predation.
The three cooperating agencies analyzed four alternatives for
future Caspian tern management in the Columbia River estuary; of these,
Alternative C has been identified as the preferred alternative.
Alternative C has not been modified from the Draft EIS which was
released on July 23, 2004 for public review. This alternative proposes
management actions that would reduce tern predation on juvenile
salmonids in the Columbia River estuary by redistributing a portion of
the tern colony on East Sand Island throughout the Pacific Coast/
Western region. This would be achieved by reducing the tern nesting
site on East Sand Island to approximately 1 to 1.5 acres and managing
sites in Washington, Oregon, and California specifically for displaced
Caspian terns. Future management sites include Dungeness National
Wildlife Refuge, Washington; Summer, Crump, and Fern Ridge lakes,
Oregon; and Brooks Island, Hayward Regional Shoreline, and Don Edwards
San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge in San Francisco Bay,
California. We expect a colony size of approximately 2,500 to 3,125
nesting pairs to remain on East Sand Island.
The Corps would continue efforts, such as hazing (e.g., disturbance
to terns prior to the nesting season), to prevent Caspian tern nesting
on upper estuary islands (e.g., Rice Island, Miller Sands Spit, Pillar
Rock Island) of the Columbia River estuary to prevent high tern
predation rates of juvenile salmonids and comply with the 1999 Corps
Columbia River Channel Operation and Maintenance Program Biological
Opinion. The Service would issue an egg take permit to the Corps for
upper estuary islands (not including East Sand Island) if the efforts
to prevent tern nesting at these sites fail. Additionally, the Corps
would resume dredged material (e.g., sand) disposal on the downstream
end of Rice Island, on the former Caspian tern nesting site.
Public comments were requested, considered, and incorporated
throughout the planning process in numerous ways. Public outreach has
included open houses, planning updates, Federal Register notices, and a
project website. Two previous notices were published in the Federal
Register concerning this EIS (68 FR 16826, April 7, 2003 and 69 FR
44053, July 23, 2004). During the Draft EIS comment period (July 23,
2004 to September 21, 2004), the Service received a total of 37
comments (e-mails, letters, faxes, or postcards). All substantive
issues raised in the comments have been addressed through revisions
incorporated into the Final EIS text or in responses to comments
contained in Appendix J of the Final EIS.
Dated: December 3, 2004.
David J. Wesley,
Regional Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Region 1, Portland,
Oregon.
[FR Doc. 05-4 Filed 1-13-05; 8:45 am]
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