Proposed Candidate Conservation Agreement With Assurances for the Columbia Spotted Frog at Sam Noble Springs, Owyhee County, ID
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[Federal Register: February 1, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 21)]
[Notices]
[Page 5358-5359]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr01fe06-126]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Proposed Candidate Conservation Agreement With Assurances for the
Columbia Spotted Frog at Sam Noble Springs, Owyhee County, ID
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
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SUMMARY: The State of Idaho (Idaho Department of Lands and the Idaho
Department of Fish and Game) have applied to the Fish and Wildlife
Service (Service) for an enhancement of survival permit pursuant to
section 10(a)(1)(A) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended
(Act). The permit application includes a proposed Candidate
Conservation Agreement with Assurances for the Columbia spotted frog at
Sam Noble Springs, Owyhee County, Idaho (Agreement) between the
Service, and the State of Idaho. Also available is a draft
environmental assessment evaluating the proposed Agreement and permit.
Under the proposed Agreement, the parties would implement
conservation measures for Columbia spotted frogs (Rana luteiventris;
CSF) over approximately 680 acres (275 ha) in Owyhee County, Idaho. The
intent of the proposed Agreement would be to conserve CSFs by
protecting and enhancing habitat and populations, in a manner that is
consistent with the State's land use activities and the Agreement. The
proposed term of the Agreement and the permit is 22 years. The Service
has prepared a draft Environmental Assessment for approval of the
Agreement and issuance of the permit.
We request comments from the public on the permit application,
proposed Agreement, and the draft Environmental Assessment. All
comments we receive, including names and addresses, will become part of
the administrative record and may be released to the public.
DATES: Written comments should be received on or before March 3, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be addressed to Carmen Thomas, Project
Biologist, Fish and Wildlife Service, 1387 S. Vinnell Way, Room 368,
Boise, Idaho 83709 (telephone: 208/378-5243; facsimile: 208/378-5262).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Carmen Thomas at the above address or
telephone 208/378-5243.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Document Availability
You may obtain copies of the documents for review by contacting the
individual named above. You also may make an appointment to view the
documents at the above address during normal business hours.
Background
Under a Candidate Conservation Agreement with Assurances,
participating landowners voluntarily implement conservation activities
on their property to benefit species that are proposed for listing
under the Act, or other sensitive species. Candidate Conservation
Agreements with Assurances encourage private and other non-Federal
property owners to implement conservation efforts, and reduce threats
to unlisted species by assuring them they will not be subjected to
increased property use restrictions, beyond those identified in the
agreement, if the species is listed in the future under the Act.
Application requirements and issuance criteria for enhancement of
survival permits through Candidate Conservation Agreements with
Assurances are found in 50 CFR 17.22(d) and 17.32(d).
Populations of the CSF are found from Alaska and British Columbia
to Washington east of the Cascades, eastern Oregon, Idaho, the Bighorn
Mountains of Wyoming, the Mary's, Reese, and Owyhee River systems of
Nevada, the Wasatch Mountains, and
[[Page 5359]]
the western desert of Utah (Green et al. 1997). Genetic evidence (Green
et al. 1997) indicates that CSFs may be a single species with three
subspecies, or may be several weakly-differentiated species. The
Service currently recognizes four populations based on disjunct
distribution: Northern, Great Basin, Wasatch, and West Desert. CSFs are
believed to be abundant within the Northern population of the species'
range from Alaska to Wyoming (Gomez 1994). The other three disjunct
populations (Great Basin, Wasatch, and West Desert) received candidate
status in 1993 based on the loss of subpopulations in a number of areas
in Nevada (58 FR 27260). At that time, the Great Basin population was
given a listing priority of 9; in 2001 the priority was raised to 3
(the highest listing rank possible for a subspecies), based upon the
discovery of Chytridiomycosis in the Owyhee subpopulation, declining
numbers, and the imminence of threats. The CSF is known to occur in
Owyhee and Twin Falls counties, Idaho.
Columbia Spotted Frogs at Sam Noble Springs are part of the Great
Basin Population of frogs, which is a candidate for listing under the
Act. Threats to this population mainly include impacts to, or loss of,
habitat--specifically, the loss of perennial wetlands used for feeding,
breeding, hibernating, and migrating. Improperly managed livestock
grazing practices and water use in areas where frogs occur may
contribute to habitat loss. The State of Idaho has an opportunity at
Sam Noble Springs to address effects of livestock grazing on CSF
habitat while continuing to meet their management needs. By entering
into the proposed Agreement with the Service, the State of Idaho would
help ensure long-term protection of a population of a species that is a
candidate for listing under the Act, by significantly reducing the risk
of impacts to CSF habitat, while reducing any long-term regulatory risk
to their ability to generate funds from those lands if CSFs were listed
and take prohibitions limited their ability to lease those lands for
livestock grazing.
As a result of this conservation opportunity and potential
regulatory concern, the State of Idaho developed the proposed Candidate
Conservation Agreement with Assurances for the CSF at Sam Noble
Springs, Owyhee County, Idaho, in cooperation with the Service, and is
applying to the Service for a permit under section 10(a) of the Act,
authorizing incidental take of CSFs.
Under the proposed Agreement and permit, the State of Idaho and the
Service would implement various conservation measures on the Sam Noble
Springs parcel. The conservation measures under the proposed Agreement
are intended to reduce all threats to the CSF that are controllable by
the State of Idaho within the project area. Conservation measures that
would be implemented within the project area include: (1) Altered
timing and intensity of livestock grazing; (2) installation of grazing
management structures; (3) creation of additional livestock watering
ponds; (4) installation and operation of a water collection facility
serving a livestock watering trough; (5) maintenance of existing
livestock watering ponds; (6) management of vegetation in and adjacent
to occupied CSF habitat; and (7) monitoring of CSF populations and
habitat condition to determine effectiveness and compliance with the
Agreement. If issued, the permit would authorize incidental take of
CSFs as a result of specified land management practices related to
agriculture, livestock management, and CSF habitat restoration.
We provide this notice pursuant to section 10(c) of the Endangered
Species Act and implementing regulations for the National Environmental
Policy Act (40 CFR 1506.6), in order to solicit public review and
comments on the permit application and a related environmental
assessment. Comments received will be considered in the course of our
evaluation of the proposed permit under section 10(a) of the Endangered
Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act. We will not make our
final decision on the application until after completion of the comment
period and will fully consider all comments received during the comment
period.
Dated: January 26, 2006.
David J. Wesley,
Deputy Regional Director, Fish and Wildlife Service, Portland, Oregon.
[FR Doc. E6-1302 Filed 1-31-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P
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