[Federal Register: May 15, 2009 (Volume 74, Number 93)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Page 22870-22880]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr15my09-18]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[FWS-R1-ES-2009-0005; 92220-1113-0000-C6]
RIN 1018-AW42
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Proposed Rule To
Reclassify the Oregon Chub (Oregonichthys crameri) From Endangered to
Threatened
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: Under the authority of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (Act), we, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service),
propose to reclassify the Oregon chub (Oregonichthys crameri) from
endangered to threatened. This proposal is based on a thorough review
of the best available scientific data, which indicate that the species'
status has improved such that it is not currently in danger of
extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range. We
seek information, data, and comments from the public regarding the
Oregon chub and this proposal.
DATES: We will accept comments received on or before July 14, 2009.
Public hearing requests must be received by June 29, 2009.
[[Page 22871]]
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
U.S. mail or hand-delivery: Public Comments Processing,
Attn: RIN 1018-AW42; Division of Policy and Directives Management; U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 222; Arlington,
VA 22203.
We will not accept e-mail or faxes. We will post all comments on
http://www.regulations.gov. This generally means that we will post any
personal information you provide us (see the Public Comments section
below for more information).
Public Hearing Requests: To request a public hearing, contact the
person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul Henson, State Supervisor, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Oregon Fish and Wildlife Office, 2600 SE.
98th Avenue, Suite 100, Portland, Oregon 97266; (telephone 503/231-
6179). Persons who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD)
may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800/877-8339,
24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Comments Solicited
Our intent is to use the best available commercial and scientific
data as the foundation for all endangered and threatened species
classification decisions. Comments or suggestions from the public,
other concerned governmental agencies, the scientific community,
industry, or any other interested party concerning this proposed rule
to downlist the Oregon chub are hereby solicited. Comments particularly
are sought concerning:
(1) Biological information concerning the Oregon chub, including
competition from non-native species and the risks associated with loss
of genetic diversity in isolated populations;
(2) Relevant data concerning any current or likely future threats
(or lack thereof) to the Oregon chub;
(3) Additional information concerning the range, distribution,
population size and population trends of the Oregon chub, including the
locations of any additional populations; and
(4) Information regarding management plans or other mechanisms that
provide protection to Oregon chub or their habitats.
You may submit your comments and materials concerning this proposed
rule by one of the methods listed in the ADDRESSES section. We will not
accept comments sent by e-mail or fax or to an address not listed in
the ADDRESSES section.
We will post your entire comment on http://www.regulations.gov.
Before including your address, phone number, or e-mail address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
Comments and materials we receive, as well as supporting
documentation we used in preparing this proposed rule, will be
available for public inspection on http://www.regulations.gov, or by
appointment during normal business hours at the Oregon Fish and
Wildlife Office, 2600 SE. 98th Avenue, Suite 100, Portland, Oregon
97266, (503/231-6179).
Public Hearing
The Act provides for one or more public hearings on this proposal,
if requested. Requests must be received by the date specified in DATES.
Such requests must be made in writing and addressed to the Field
Supervisor (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section above).
Previous Federal Action
In our December 30, 1982, Review of Vertebrate Wildlife for Listing
as Endangered or Threatened Species Under the Act, we listed the Oregon
chub as a Category 2 candidate species (47 FR 58454). Category 2
candidates, a designation no longer used by the Service, were species
for which information contained in Service files indicated that
proposing to list was possibly appropriate but additional data were
needed to support a listing proposal. The Oregon chub maintained its
Category 2 status in both the September 18, 1985 (50 FR 37958) and
January 6, 1989 (54 FR 554) Notices of Review.
On April 10, 1990, the Service received a petition to list the
Oregon chub as an endangered species and to designate critical habitat.
The petition and supporting documentation were submitted by Dr. Douglas
F. Markle and Mr. Todd N. Pearsons, both affiliated with Oregon State
University. The petitioners submitted taxonomic, biological,
distributional, and historical information and cited numerous
scientific articles in support of the petition. The petition and
accompanying data described the Oregon chub as endangered because it
had experienced a 98 percent range reduction and remaining populations
faced significant threats. On November 1, 1990, the Service published a
90-day finding indicating that the petitioners had presented
substantial information indicating that the requested action may be
warranted and initiated a status review (55 FR 46080).
On November 19, 1991, the Service published a 12-month finding on
the petition concurrent with a proposal to list the species as
endangered (56 FR 58348). A final rule listing the Oregon chub as
endangered was published in the Federal Register on October 18, 1993
(58 FR 53800). A 5-year review of the Oregon chub's status was
completed in February 2008 (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 2008a, pp.
1-34); this review concluded that the Oregon chub's status had
substantially improved since listing, and that the Oregon chub no
longer met the definition of an endangered species, but does meet the
definition of a threatened species, under the Act. The review,
therefore, recommended that the Oregon chub should be downlisted from
endangered to threatened.
On March 10, 2009, the Service published a proposed rule to
designate critical habitat (74 FR 10412) for the Oregon chub. The
public comment period on the proposed critical habitat rule closes on
May 11, 2009.
Species Information
The Oregon chub is a small minnow (Family: Cyprinidae) endemic to
the Willamette River Basin in western Oregon (Markle et al. 1991, p.
288). The Oregon chub has an olive-colored back grading to silver on
the sides and white on the belly (Markle et al. 1991, p. 286). Oregon
chub are found in slack water off-channel habitats such as beaver
ponds, oxbows, side channels, backwater sloughs, low-gradient
tributaries, and flooded marshes. These habitats usually have little or
no water flow, silty and organic substrate, and abundant aquatic
vegetation for hiding and spawning cover (Pearsons 1989, p. 12;
Scheerer and McDonald 2000, p. 9). Summer temperatures in shallow ponds
inhabited by Oregon chub generally exceed 16 degrees Celsius (C) (61
degrees Fahrenheit (F)) (Scheerer et al. 1998, p. 26). In the winter
months, Oregon chub are found buried in detritus or concealed in
aquatic vegetation (Pearsons 1989, p. 16).
Oregon chub reach maturity at about 2 years of age (Scheerer and
McDonald 2003, p. 78) and in wild populations can
[[Page 22872]]
live up to 9 years. Most individuals over 5 years old are females
(Scheerer and McDonald 2003, p. 68). Oregon chub spawn in warm (16 to
21 degrees C (61 to 70 degrees F)) shallow water from June through
August (Scheerer and McDonald 2000, p. 10). The diet of Oregon chub
collected in a May sample consisted primarily of copepods, cladocerans,
and chironomid larvae (Markle et al. 1991, p. 288).
In the early 1990s, Oregon chub populations were found
predominantly in the Middle Fork Willamette River (Middle Fork), with a
few, small populations found in the Mid-Willamette River, Santiam
River, and Coast Fork Willamette River (Coast Fork). The species is now
well distributed throughout the Willamette Basin (in Polk, Marion,
Linn, Lane and Benton Counties, Oregon), with populations in the
Santiam River (8 sites), Mid-Willamette River (6 sites), McKenzie River
(4 sites), Middle Fork (14 sites), and Coast Fork (3 sites) (Scheerer
et al. 2007, p. 2). There are currently 19 populations that contain
more than 500 adults each; 16 of these have a stable or increasing
trend (Scheerer 2008a, p. 6).
Review of the Recovery Plan
The Service published a final recovery plan for the Oregon chub in
1998 (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1998). Recovery plans are intended
to guide actions to recover listed species and to provide measurable
objectives against which to measure progress towards recovery, however,
precise attainment of the recovery criteria is not a prerequisite for
downlisting or delisting. The Oregon chub recovery plan established the
following criteria for downlisting the species from endangered to
threatened:
(1) Establish and manage 10 populations of at least 500 adults
each;
(2) All of these populations must exhibit a stable or increasing
trend for 5 years; and
(3) At least three populations must be located in each of the three
sub-basins of the Willamette River identified in the plan (Mainstem
Willamette River, Middle Fork, and Santiam River).
The recovery plan established the following criteria for delisting
(i.e., removing the species from the List of Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife):
(1) Establish and manage 20 populations of at least 500 adults
each;
(2) All of these populations must exhibit a stable or increasing
trend for 7 years;
(3) At least four populations must be located in each of the three
sub-basins (Mainstem Willamette River, Middle Fork, and Santiam River);
and
(4) Management of these populations must be guaranteed in
perpetuity.
Recovery actions specified in the recovery plan to achieve the
downlisting and delisting goals included managing existing sites,
establishment of new populations, research into the ecology of the
species, and public education and outreach to foster greater
understanding of the Oregon chub and its place in the natural
environment of the Willamette Basin (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
1998, pp. 28-44).
Recovery Plan Implementation
When the Oregon chub was listed as endangered in 1993, it was known
to occur at only nine locations within a 30-kilometer (18.6-mile) reach
of the Willamette River, representing just two percent of its
historical range (58 FR 53800, p. 53801). Since 1992, the Service,
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW), U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (Corps), U.S. Forest Service, Oregon Parks and Recreation
Department and Oregon Department of Transportation have funded ODFW
staff to conduct surveys for Oregon chub throughout the Willamette
Valley. ODFW has surveyed 650 off-channel habitats and small
tributaries in the Willamette River Basin (Scheerer 2007, p. 92),
greatly increasing our knowledge of the current and potential habitat
available to the Oregon chub. Other research projects have resulted in
new information on the species' habitat use, timing of spawning, and
age and growth patterns (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 2008a, pp. 13-
15).
The status of the Oregon chub has dramatically improved since it
was listed as endangered. The improvement is due largely to the
implementation of actions identified in the Oregon chub recovery plan.
This includes the discovery of many new populations as a result of
ODFW's exhaustive surveys of the basin, and the establishment of
additional populations via successful reintroductions within the
species' historical range (Scheerer 2007, p. 97). To date, Oregon chub
populations have been introduced at 15 sites (7 in the Mainstem
Willamette Sub-basin, 5 in the Middle Fork Sub-basin, and 3 in the
Santiam Sub-basin) (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 2; Scheerer 2008a, p. 6).
Introduced populations have been established in suitable habitats with
low connectivity to other suitable aquatic habitats to reduce the risk
of invasion by nonnative fishes (see Factor C below for more
information) (Scheerer 2007, p. 98). At present, 9 of these populations
persist and exhibit stable or increasing trends; 1 population was
reintroduced too recently to evaluate success (i.e., the population
introduced in 2008 at St. Paul Ponds); and 5 introduced populations
have been extirpated or are not likely to remain viable. Reasons for
reintroduction failures include: pond desiccation, low dissolved
oxygen, unauthorized introductions of nonnative predatory fishes, and
high mortality of introduced fish (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 2; Scheerer
2008a, p. 6; Scheerer 2009a, p. 1).
Currently, there are 36 Oregon chub populations, of which 19 have
more than 500 adults (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 2; Scheerer 2008a, p.
6). Fifteen years have passed since listing, and the species is now
relatively abundant and well distributed throughout much of its
presumed historical range. The risk of extinction has been
substantially reduced as threats have been managed, and as new
populations have been discovered and re-established. The Oregon chub
has exceeded or met nearly all of the criteria for downlisting to
threatened described in the recovery plan. A review of the species'
current status relative to the downlisting criteria follows.
Downlisting Criterion 1: Establish and manage 10 populations of at
least 500 adults each. This criterion has been exceeded. There are 19
populations with more than 500 adult Oregon chub (table 1).
Downlisting Criterion 2: All of these populations must exhibit a
stable or increasing trend for 5 years. This criterion has been
exceeded; there are 16 populations with at least 500 adults that are
stable or increasing (table 1). Scheerer et al. (2007, p. 4) defined
abundance trends as increasing, declining, stable, or not declining
using linear regression of abundance estimates over time for each
population with more than 500 adult fish over the last 5 years. When
the slope of this regression was negative and significantly different
from zero (P<0.10), the population was categorized as declining. When
the slope was positive and significantly different from zero (P<0.10),
the population was categorized as increasing. When the slope was not
significantly different from zero (P>0.10), Scheerer et al. (2007, p.
4) calculated the coefficient of variation of the abundance estimates
to discriminate between populations that were stable (i.e., low
variation in population abundance estimates) and those that were
unstable but not declining (i.e., high variation in population
abundance estimates). When the coefficient of variation was less than
1.0, the
[[Page 22873]]
population was defined as stable; otherwise, the population was
considered unstable but not declining (table 1).
Downlisting Criterion 3: At least three populations (which meet
criteria 1 and 2 above) must be located in each of the three sub-basins
of the Willamette River (Mainstem Willamette River, Middle Fork
Willamette, and Santiam River). This criterion has been exceeded in two
sub-basins, and is nearly accomplished in the third. In the Mainstem
Willamette River sub-basin, there are 6 populations with 500 or more
Oregon chub with stable or increasing trends; in the Middle Fork
Willamette sub-basin, there are 8 populations with 500 or more Oregon
chub with stable or increasing trends; and in the Santiam River sub-
basin, there are 3 populations with 500 or more Oregon chub, but only 2
with stable or increasing trends over the last 5 years (Table 1). Five-
year trends were calculated for abundant populations (>500 individuals
for the last 5 years) only. Table 1 shows the populations by sub-basin.
Table 1--Oregon Chub Population Estimates and Trends
[From Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 2; Scheerer, 2008a, p. 6, Scheerer 2008b, p. 1]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Population
Population site name Owner \1\ estimate \2\ 5-Year trend \3\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Santiam River Sub-Basin
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Foster Pullout Pond..................... Corps...................... 2,640 stable.
Gray Slough............................. Private.................... 660 stable.
South Stayton Pond...................... ODFW....................... 1,710 ...........................
Geren Island North Channel.............. City of Salem.............. 210 declining.
Pioneer Park Backwater.................. Private.................... 320 ...........................
Stayton Public Works Pond............... City of Stayton............ 70 ...........................
Santiam I-5 Side Channels............... ODOT....................... (22) ...........................
Green's Bridge Slough................... Private.................... (8) ...........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mainstem Willamette Sub-Basin (Includes McKenzie River and Coast Fork)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ankeny Willow Marsh..................... USFWS...................... 36,450 increasing.
Dunn Wetland............................ Private.................... 34,530 stable.
Finley Gray Creek Swamp................. USFWS...................... 2,140 increasing.
Finley Cheadle Pond..................... USFWS...................... 3,520 increasing.
Finley Display Pond..................... USFWS...................... 830 increasing.
Muddy Creek............................. Private.................... (3) ...........................
Russell Pond............................ Private.................... 650 stable.
Shetzline Pond.......................... Private.................... 200 ...........................
Big Island.............................. Private.................... 130 ...........................
Green Island............................ Private.................... (12) ...........................
Herman Pond............................. USFS....................... 180 ...........................
Coast Fork Side Channels................ OPRD/ODOT.................. 80 ...........................
Lynx Hollow Side Channels............... OPRD....................... (2) ...........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Middle Fork Sub-Basin
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shady Dell Pond......................... USFS....................... 7,250 increasing.
E. Bristow St. Park--Berry Slough....... OPRD....................... 5,460 increasing.
Dexter Reservoir RV Alcove-- DEX3....... Corps...................... 4,020 increasing.
Wicopee Pond............................ USFS....................... 5,430 stable.
Fall Creek Spillway Ponds............... Corps...................... 3,050 declining.
Buckhead Creek.......................... USFS....................... 1,260 declining.
East Fork Minnow Creek Pond............. ODOT....................... 2,160 stable.
Elijah Bristow Island Pond.............. OPRD....................... 1,620 stable.
Hospital Pond........................... Corps...................... 3,680 stable.
Dexter Reservoir Alcove--PIT1........... Corps...................... 680 stable.
Haws Pond............................... Private.................... 280 ...........................
E. Bristow St. Park--NE Slough.......... OPRD....................... 230 ...........................
Jasper Park Slough...................... OPRD....................... (1) ...........................
St. Paul Ponds.......................... ODFW....................... (21) ...........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Owner abbreviations: Corps = U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, USFWS = U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, ODOT =
Oregon Department of Transportation, OPRD = Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, ODFW = Oregon Department
of Fish and Wildlife.
\2\ Population estimate is the most recent available (Fall 2007 or Spring 2008). Abundances are mark--recapture
estimates except those shown in parentheses, which are the number of fish collected.
\3\ 5-year trends were calculated for abundant populations (>500 individuals for the last 5 years) only.
Additional Conservation Measures
The Oregon Chub Working Group (Working Group) was formed in 1991.
This group of Federal and State agency biologists, academics, land
managers and others meet each year to share information on the status
of the Oregon chub, results of new research, and ongoing threats to the
species. The Working Group has been an important force in improving the
conservation status of the Oregon chub.
An interagency conservation agreement was established for the
Oregon chub in 1992, prior to listing (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
1998, p. 59). ODFW, Oregon Department of Parks and Recreation, Corps,
U.S. Bureau of
[[Page 22874]]
Land Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and U.S. Forest
Service are the parties to the agreement. The objectives of the
conservation agreement are to: (1) Establish a task force drawn from
participating agencies to oversee and coordinate Oregon chub
conservation and management actions, (2) protect existing populations,
(3) establish new populations, and (4) foster greater public
understanding of the species, its status, and the factors that
influence it (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1998, pp. 65-66).
The Oregon chub is designated as ``Sensitive-Critical'' by ODFW.
The ``Sensitive'' species classification was created under Oregon's
Sensitive Species Rule (OAR 635-100-040) to address the need for a
proactive species conservation approach. The Sensitive Species List is
a nonregulatory tool that helps focus wildlife management and research
activities, with the goal of preventing species from declining to the
point of qualifying as ``threatened'' or ``endangered'' under the
Oregon Endangered Species Act (ORS 496.171, 496.172, 496.176, 496.182
and 496.192). Species designated as Sensitive-Critical are those for
which listing as threatened or endangered would be appropriate if
immediate conservation actions were not taken. This designation
encourages but does not require the implementation of any conservation
actions for the species.
Summary of Factors Affecting the Species
Section 4 of the Act and its implementing regulations (50 CFR part
424) set forth the procedures for listing species, reclassifying
species, or removing species from listed status. ``Species'' is defined
by the Act as including any species or subspecies of fish or wildlife
or plants, and any distinct vertebrate population segment of fish or
wildlife that interbreeds when mature (16 U.S.C. 1532(16)). Once the
``species'' is determined, we then evaluate whether that species may be
endangered or threatened because of one or more of the five factors
described in section 4(a)(1) of the Act. We must consider these same
five factors in reclassifying or delisting a species. For species that
are already listed as threatened or endangered, this analysis of
threats is an evaluation of both the threats currently facing the
species and the threats that are reasonably likely to affect the
species in the foreseeable future following the delisting or
downlisting and the removal or reduction of the Act's protections.
A species is ``endangered'' for purposes of the Act if it is in
danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its
range, and is ``threatened'' if it is likely to become endangered
within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion
of its range. The word ``range'' is used here to refer to the range in
which the species currently exists, and the word ``significant'' refers
to the value of that portion of the range being considered to the
conservation of the species. The ``foreseeable future'' is the period
of time over which events or effects reasonably can or should be
anticipated, or trends reasonably extrapolated; see discussion
following Factor E, below.
Following a rangewide threats analysis we evaluate whether the
Oregon chub is threatened or endangered in any significant portion(s)
of its range.
Factor A. The Present or Threatened Destruction, Modification, or
Curtailment of Its Habitat or Range
Historical records indicate that the Oregon chub was distributed
throughout the Willamette Basin, from the Clackamas River in the north,
to the Coast Fork and Middle Fork in the south (Markle 1991, p. 288).
When the Oregon chub was listed as endangered in 1993, the species was
known to exist at only nine locations, representing only 2 percent of
the species' historical range (Markle 1991, pp. 288-289; Scheerer et
al. 2007, p. 2). Four of these locations had fewer than 10 individuals
(Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 2). This precipitous decline in the species'
abundance and distribution was attributed to the extensive
channelization, dam construction, and chemical contamination that
occurred in the Willamette Basin, particularly from the 1940s through
the late 20th century (Pearsons 1989, pp. 29-30).
There are at least 371 dams in the Willamette River Basin, most of
which were constructed during the period 1950 to 1980 (Hulse et al.
2002, p. 30). These dams reduced the magnitude, extent, and frequency
of flooding in the basin, which dramatically reduced the amount of
slough and side channel habitats used by the Oregon chub (Hulse et al.
2002, pp. 28-30). Other structural changes, such as revetment and
channelization, diking and drainage, and the removal of floodplain
vegetation, eliminated or altered the side channels and sloughs used by
the Oregon chub, and destroyed the natural processes that replenish
these slack water habitats (Hjort et al. 1984, p. 73; Sedell and
Frogatt 1984, p. 1833; Hulse et al. 2002, p. 27). Analysis of
historical records shows that over one-half of the Willamette's sloughs
and alcoves had been lost by 1995 (Hulse et al. 2002, p. 18). Although
the Oregon chub evolved in a dynamic environment in which flooding
periodically created and reconnected habitat for the species, currently
most populations of Oregon chub are isolated from other chub
populations due to the reduced frequency and magnitude of flood events
and the presence of migration barriers such as impassable culverts and
beaver dams (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 9).
In the 15 years since the Oregon chub was listed as endangered,
concerted efforts by Federal, State, and local governments and private
landowners have increased the number of Oregon chub populations from 9
to 36 (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 2; Scheerer 2008a, p. 6). This dramatic
increase in the number of populations is a result of the discovery of
new populations through extensive surveys of suitable habitats
throughout the Willamette Basin and the establishment of new
populations through successful reintroductions within their historical
range (Scheerer 2007, p. 97). Since 1992, Oregon chub have been
reintroduced to 15 locations, resulting in the successful establishment
of 9 populations (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 2; Scheerer 2008a, p. 6).
The analysis of threats in the final rule to list the Oregon chub
as an endangered species and the recovery plan for the species
discussed numerous potential threats to water quality in Oregon chub
habitats. Many Oregon chub populations occur near rail, highway, and
power transmission corridors, agricultural fields, and within public
park and campground facilities, and there was concern that these
populations could be threatened by chemical spills, runoff, or changes
in water level or flow conditions caused by construction, diversions,
or natural desiccation (58 FR 53800, October 18, 1993; U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service 1998, p. 14, Scheerer 2008c, p. 1). In the 15 years
since listing, a few of these concerns have been realized, and are
discussed in the paragraphs below.
Excessive siltation from ground disturbing activities in the
watershed, such as logging upstream of Oregon chub habitat, can degrade
or destroy Oregon chub habitat. The threat of siltation due to logging
in the watershed has been identified at five sites: Green Island North
Channel, Finley Gray Creek Swamp, East Fork Minnow Creek Pond, Buckhead
Creek, and Wicopee Pond (Scheerer 2008c, p. 1). In the 1990s, a large
part of the Minnow Creek Watershed in the Middle Fork Willamette Sub-
basin was logged; flood events in the watershed in 1996, 1997, and 1998
caused accelerated
[[Page 22875]]
sedimentation in the beaver pond at East Fork Minnow Creek Pond, and
over half of the open water wetted area of the Oregon chub habitat
there was lost as sediment filled the pond (Scheerer 2009b, p. 1). The
Oregon chub population in East Fork Minnow Creek Pond declined
dramatically following these floods and the resulting sedimentation
(Scheerer 2009b, p. 1).
Water quality investigations at sites in the Middle Fork and
Mainstem Willamette sub-basins have found some adverse effects to
Oregon chub habitats. Nutrient enrichment may have caused the crash of
the Oregon chub population at Oakridge Slough on the Middle Fork. The
slough is downstream from the Oakridge Sewage Treatment Plant and has a
thick layer of decaying organic matter, which may limit the amount of
useable habitat available to the chub (Buck 2003, p. 2). In the late
1990s, the Oregon chub population in Oakridge Slough peaked at nearly
500 individuals; since then, the population has apparently declined to
zero (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 2). Increased nitrogen and phosphorus
concentrations have been detected in the slough; while the nutrient
concentrations are not believed to be directly harmful to Oregon chub,
the elevated nutrient levels may have resulted in eutrophication of the
pond, with associated anoxic conditions unsuitable for chub, or
increased plant and algal growth that severely reduced habitat
availability (Buck 2003, p. 12).
Studies at William L. Finley National Wildlife Refuge have found
evidence of elevated levels of nutrients and pesticides in Oregon chub
habitats (Materna and Buck 2007, p. 67). Water samples were collected
in 1998 from Gray Creek Swamp, which is home to a large population of
Oregon chub. Analyses detected three herbicides, although all were
below criteria levels recommended for protection of aquatic life;
however, one form of nitrogen (total Kjeldahl N) exceeded Environmental
Protection Agency criteria levels recommended for protection of aquatic
life in the Willamette Valley (Materna and Buck 2007, p. 67). The
source of the contamination is likely agricultural runoff from farm
fields adjacent to the refuge (Materna and Buck 2007, p. 68). We note
that EPA's recommended criteria for protection of aquatic life are not
intended to be protective of all aquatic life, and may not be fully
protective of the Oregon Chub. EPA and the Service are working together
to assess the effects of pollutants on the Oregon chub through section
7 consultation on Oregon water quality standards.
Fluctuating water levels in Lookout Point Reservoir on the Middle
Fork Willamette River were limiting the breeding success of the Oregon
chub population in Hospital Pond, which provides habitat for the
species in a pool connected to the reservoir by a culvert. In 2001,
2002, and 2003, the Corps, which manages Lookout Point Reservoir,
implemented a series of projects to protect the population of Oregon
chub in Hospital Pond. The goal was to allow the Corps to manage the
water level in Lookout Point Reservoir independently of the water
elevation in Hospital Pond. The Corps installed a gate on Hospital
Pond's outlet culvert and lined the porous berm between the pond and
reservoir; these modifications allow the Corps to maintain the water
level needed to support Oregon chub spawning in Hospital Pond
independent of the water level in the reservoir (U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service 2002, pp. 1-11). The Corps also excavated additional area to
create more suitable spawning habitat in the pond (U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service 2003, pp. 1-3). The result of these management actions
has been a large stable population of Oregon chub in Hospital Pond
(Scheerer 2008a, p. 6).
Most of the known Oregon chub populations occur on lands with some
level of protective status and management (see Table 1). The Service
manages several Oregon chub populations on the Finley and Ankeny units
of the Willamette Valley National Wildlife Refuge Complex (Refuge).
Recovery of the Oregon chub is a high priority for the Refuge. The
Refuge actively monitors the status of the populations, habitat
quality, and nonnative fish presence; when threats are detected, the
Refuge implements management actions to reverse the threats (Smith
2008, p. 1).
Five populations of Oregon chub occur on lands managed by the
Corps; the Corps manages Oregon chub in accordance with the Service's
biological opinion on the Willamette Project. In July 2008, the Corps,
Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), and Bureau of Reclamation (BOR)
completed formal consultation with the Service under section 7(a)(2) of
the Endangered Species Act on the operation and maintenance of the
Willamette Project, the system of 13 dams and associated impoundments
that provide flood control, irrigation, municipal and industrial water
supply, navigation, fish and wildlife conservation, flow augmentation,
hydroelectric power generation, and recreation to the Willamette
Valley. The Service concluded that the project would not jeopardize the
continued existence of the Oregon chub (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
2008b, pp. 1-204). The Service's biological opinion describes the
measures that will be implemented by the Corps, BPA, and BOR to
maintain and improve habitat for the Oregon chub. These measures
include:
(1) Monitoring the status of Oregon chub populations affected by
operation and maintenance of the dams to gain a better understanding of
the influence of the Willamette Project on species;
(2) Managing water levels in Oregon chub habitats directly affected
by reservoir operations;
(3) Relocating Oregon chub from ponds adversely affected by
reservoir operations to new locations with better prospects for long-
term protection;
(4) Studies to identify the effects of flow management on Oregon
chub habitats; and
(5) Funding a pilot study to investigate the impact of floodplain
restoration and reconnection on fish communities in river reaches below
Willamette Project dams.
Operation and maintenance of the Willamette Project under the new
biological opinion will result in improved protections for the Oregon
chub and new information that will benefit the species throughout the
Willamette Basin.
The Oregon Department of Transportation has developed and is
implementing a plan to protect and enhance Oregon chub populations on
the agency's properties or those which may be affected by highway
maintenance on the Santiam River, Coast Fork Willamette River, and
Middle Fork Willamette River (Scheerer 2005, pp. 1-21).
The Oregon chub populations at Elijah Bristow State Park and Jasper
Park on the Middle Fork are managed by the Oregon Parks and Recreation
Department, which uses the Service's recovery plan as guidance to
ensure conservation of the chub populations within the parks (Schleier
2008).
The U.S. Forest Service monitors and manages several Oregon chub
populations on the Middle Fork (Scheerer 2008b, p. 1).
In addition to the management and protection provided to the Oregon
chub on Federal and State lands, two Safe Harbor Agreements have been
completed to guide management of Oregon chub populations on private
lands. Safe Harbor Agreements are voluntary arrangements between the
Service and cooperating non-Federal landowners to promote management
for listed species on non-Federal property while giving assurances to
participating
[[Page 22876]]
landowners that no additional future regulatory restrictions will be
imposed. The Service's Oregon Fish and Wildlife Office is preparing a
programmatic Safe Harbor Agreement to allow more landowners to enroll
in the program, which, based on past experience, is likely to result in
the reintroduction of Oregon chub populations on more private lands
throughout the species' historical range.
Summary of Factor A: The Oregon chub has experienced extensive loss
of slough and side-channel habitat due to hydrological changes
resulting from dam construction and channelization in the Willamette
Valley. However, many new habitats have been artificially created and
are being managed to maintain populations of Oregon chub. Habitat
quality is threatened by water quality degradation, though this has
been documented at only a few sites. Habitat conditions have improved
to the point where the species is not presently in danger of
extinction. However, without continued protections provided by the Act,
or long-term management agreements, the Oregon chub would likely become
endangered in the foreseeable future due, in part, to the destruction,
modification or curtailment of its habitat.
Factor B. Overutilization for Commercial, Recreational, Scientific, or
Educational Purposes
Overutilization was not a factor in listing nor is it currently
known to be a threat to the Oregon chub.
Factor C. Disease or Predation
The proliferation of predatory nonnative fish is the largest
current threat to Oregon chub populations (Scheerer et al. 2007, p.
14). Nearly half of the fish species found in the Willamette Basin are
introduced; the basin contains 31 native fish species and 29 nonnative
species (Hulse et al. 2002, p. 44). The large-scale alteration of the
Willamette Basin's hydrologic system (i.e., construction of dams and
the resultant changes in flood frequency and intensity) has created
conditions that favor nonnative predatory fishes, and reservoirs
throughout the basin have become sources of continual nonnative fish
invasions in the downstream reaches (Li et al. 1987, p. 198).
Oregon chub are most abundant at sites where nonnative fishes are
absent (Scheerer 2007, p. 96). Predatory nonnative centrarchids (bass
and sunfish) and Ameiurus spp. (bullhead catfish) are common in the
off-channel habitats used by Oregon chub (Scheerer 2002, p. 1075).
Sites with high connectivity to adjacent flowing water frequently
contain nonnative predatory fishes and rarely contain Oregon chub
(Scheerer 2007, p. 99). The presence of centrarchids and bullhead
catfishes is probably preventing Oregon chub from recolonizing suitable
habitats throughout the basin (Markle et al. 1991, p. 291).
Management for Oregon chub has focused on establishing secure,
isolated habitats free of nonnative fishes. However, natural flood
events may breach barriers to connectivity allowing invasion by
nonnative fishes. During the 1996 floods in the Willamette Basin,
nonnative fishes invaded the habitats of the two largest Oregon chub
populations in the Santiam River; in the next 2 years, these
populations declined by more than 50 percent, and had not recovered to
pre-1996 levels more than 5 years later (Scheerer 2002, p. 1078).
Game fish have also been intentionally introduced into chub ponds.
An illegal introduction of largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) at
an Oregon chub population site on the Middle Fork apparently caused a
significant decline in that population from over 7,000 fish to
approximately 2,000 fish from 2000 to 2007 (Scheerer et al. 2007, p.
14). The ubiquity of nonnative fishes in the Willamette Basin has
created a substantial challenge to the recovery of the Oregon chub.
Scheerer et al. (2007, pp. 10-14) conclude, ``The resulting paradox is
that the frequent interaction of the river with the floodplain habitats
* * *, conditions which historically created off-channel habitats and
aided in the dispersal of chub and the interchange of individuals among
populations, now poses a threat to Oregon chub by allowing dispersal of
nonnative species.''
Nonnative fishes may also serve as sources of parasites and
diseases for the Oregon chub. However, disease and parasite problems
have not been identified in this species, nor has the issue been
studied.
Summary of Factor C: Predatory nonnative fishes are the greatest
current threat to the recovery of the Oregon chub. Nonnative fishes are
abundant and ubiquitous in the Willamette River Basin, and continual
monitoring and management are required to protect existing Oregon chub
populations from invasion. Predation remains a concern, but as the
status of the species has improved since listing (i.e., more
populations have been established and are being managed to minimize
threats), the relative effect of the threat of predatory nonnative
fishes has declined. Nevertheless, predation continues to impact the
Oregon chub such that it is likely to become endangered in the
foreseeable future without continued protection under the Act.
Factor D. The Inadequacy of Existing Regulatory Mechanisms
Before the Oregon chub was federally listed as endangered in 1993,
the species had no regulatory protections. Upon its listing as
endangered, the species benefited from the protections of the
Endangered Species Act, which include the prohibition against take and
the requirement for interagency consultation for Federal actions that
may affect the species. Section 9 of the Act and Federal regulations
pursuant to section 4(d) of the Act prohibit the take of endangered and
threatened species without special exemption. ``Take'' is defined as to
harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or
collect, or to attempt to engage in any such conduct (50 CFR 17.3).
``Harm'' is further defined to include significant habitat modification
or degradation that results in death or injury to listed species by
significantly impairing essential behavioral patterns, including
breeding, feeding, or sheltering; ``harass'' is defined as intentional
or negligent actions that create the likelihood of injury to listed
species to such an extent as to significantly disrupt normal behavior
patterns, which include, but are not limited to, breeding, feeding, or
sheltering (50 CFR 17.3).
Section 7(a)(1) of the Act requires all Federal agencies to utilize
their authorities in furtherance of the purposes of the Act by carrying
out programs for the conservation of endangered species and threatened
species. Section 7(a)(2) of the Act requires Federal agencies to ensure
that any action authorized, funded, or carried out by them is not
likely to jeopardize the continued existence of listed species or
adversely modify their critical habitat. Thus, listing the Oregon chub
provided a variety of protections, including the prohibition against
take and the conservation mandates of section 7 for all Federal
agencies. Because the Service has regulations that prohibit take of all
threatened species (50 CFR 17.31(a)), unless modified by a special rule
issued pursuant to section 4(d) of the Act (50 CFR 17.31(c)), the
regulatory protections of the Act are largely the same for species
listed as endangered and as threatened; thus, the protections provided
by the Act will remain in place if the Oregon chub is reclassified as a
threatened species.
The Oregon chub is designated as ``Sensitive-Critical'' by ODFW.
This designation is a nonregulatory tool that
[[Page 22877]]
helps focus wildlife management and research activities, with the goal
of preventing species from declining to the point of qualifying as
``threatened'' or ``endangered'' under the Oregon Endangered Species
Act (ORS 496.171, 496.172, 496.176, 496.182 and 496.192). Sensitive-
Critical designation encourages but does not require the implementation
of any conservation actions for the species (see the discussion above
under Additional Conservation Measures).
The Oregon chub is not protected by any other regulatory
mechanisms.
Summary of Factor D: The regulatory mechanisms in effect under the
Endangered Species Act provide a prohibition against take, the
affirmative conservation mandate of section 7(a)(1), and the protection
against jeopardy of section 7(a)(2); these regulatory mechanisms will
remain in place if the Oregon chub is downlisted to threatened. A
program of conservation actions will be implemented by the Corps, BPA,
and BOR as a result of the Service's biological opinion on the
Willamette Project. However, because there are no other regulatory
mechanisms in place beyond the Act, the inadequacy of regulatory
mechanisms still threatens the Oregon chub.
Factor E. Other Natural or Manmade Factors Affecting Its Continued
Existence
Almost half of all the fish species in the Willamette River are not
native to the basin (Hulse et al. 2002, p. 44). Along with the direct
threat of predation (see Factor C, above), nonnative fish compete with
Oregon chub for food resources. Competition with nonnative fishes may
contribute to the decline and exclusion of Oregon chub from suitable
habitats. Observed feeding strategies and diet of nonnative fishes,
particularly juvenile centrarchids and adult mosquitofish (Gambusia
affinis) overlap with the diet and feeding strategies described for the
Oregon chub (Li et al. 1987, pp. 197-198). Thus, direct competition for
food between Oregon chub and nonnative species may limit the
distribution and expansion of the species; however, no studies have
focused on the topic of competitive exclusion to date.
Historically, floods provided the mechanism of dispersal and
genetic exchange for Oregon chub populations throughout the Willamette
Basin (Scheerer 2002, p. 1078). The current management focus on
protecting Oregon chub populations in isolation, which protects the
species from the introduction of predatory nonnative fishes, may be
having negative genetic implications (Scheerer 2002, p. 1078). This
lack of connectivity means that movement of individuals among
populations occurs rarely, if at all, which results in little or no
genetic exchange among populations (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 9).
Research is under way to determine if Oregon chub populations have
distinct genetic characteristics in the different sub-basins of the
Willamette River (Ardren et al. 2008, p. 1). There is concern that an
unintended effect of managing for isolated populations may be genetic
drift and inbreeding. If this proves to be the case, managers may need
to move fish among populations to fulfill the role that natural
flooding once played (Scheerer et al. 2007, p. 15).
Summary of Factor E: Competition from nonnative species and the
loss of genetic diversity as a result of managing Oregon chub
populations in isolated habitats are potential threats that could
affect Oregon chub populations throughout the species' range. However,
the magnitude of these threats is unknown.
Foreseeable Future
The term ``threatened species'' means any species (or subspecies
or, for vertebrates, distinct population segments) that is likely to
become an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout
all or a significant portion of its range. The Act does not define the
term ``foreseeable future.'' For the purpose of this proposed rule, we
defined the ``foreseeable future'' to be the extent to which, given the
amount and substance of available data, we can anticipate events or
effects, or reliably extrapolate threat trends, such that we reasonably
believe that reliable predictions can be made concerning the future as
it relates to the status of the species at issue.
In considering the foreseeable future as it relates to the status
of the Oregon chub, we considered the threats to the Oregon chub,
historical declines, and ongoing conservation efforts.
With respect to the Oregon chub, in the absence of the Act's
regulatory protections, historical population declines, and range
contraction, which were the result of habitat loss, predation by
nonnative fishes, and the lack of sufficient regulatory mechanisms are
expected to continue throughout the species' range. We have no
information to suggest that the threats identified above are likely to
be reduced in the foreseeable future, nor that regulatory mechanisms
will materialize to address or ameliorate the ongoing threats to the
species. Thus, future Oregon chub population declines and range
contraction, similar to what has been observed in the past, is a
reasonable expectation without continued protection under the Act.
Conclusion of 5-Factor Analysis
We have carefully assessed the best scientific and commercial data
available and have determined that the Oregon chub is not currently in
danger of extinction. We believe that the species now meets the
definition of a threatened species throughout all of its range. It has
exceeded two of the downlisting criteria and is on the brink of meeting
the third. Recovery plans are intended to guide and measure recovery.
Recovery criteria for downlisting and delisting are developed in the
recovery planning process to provide measurable goals on the path to
recovery; however, precise attainment of all recovery criteria is not a
prerequisite for downlisting or delisting. Rather, the decision to
revise the status of a listed species is based solely on the analysis
of the 5 listing factors identified in section 4 of the Act. The Act
provides for downlisting from endangered to threatened when the best
available data indicates that a species, subspecies, or distinct
population segment is no longer in danger of extinction.
At the time we completed the Recovery Plan for the Oregon Chub in
1998, we attempted to describe what the range, abundance, and
distribution of Oregon chub populations should be before downlisting
and delisting. These estimates were manifested in the downlisting and
delisting criteria discussed above, and these criteria effectively
established the Service's position on what constitutes ``threatened,''
in the case of downlisting criteria, and ``recovered,'' in the case of
the delisting criteria. Because the downlisting criteria have not been
precisely met, the proposed finding in this rule represents a departure
from the Service's previously articulated description of
``threatened,'' and so must be further explained.
We compared current Oregon chub population information with the
downlisting criteria for each sub-basin and estimated the amount by
which each population goal's had been exceeded. The result of this
comparison is shown in table 2.
[[Page 22878]]
Table 2--Comparison of Numerical Population Goals for Downlisting From the Oregon Chub Recovery Plan With
Current Population Estimates, by Sub-Basin
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent of
Downlisting goal Current population downlisting goal
Sub-basin (number of fish/ estimate (number of achieved (number of
number of fish/number of fish/number of
populations) populations) populations)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Santiam....................................... 1,500/3 5,640/8 376/267
Mainstem Willamette........................... 1,500/3 78,727/13 5,248/433
Middle Fork Willamette........................ 1,500/3 35,142/14 2,343/467
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although these totals do not incorporate the 5-year stable or
increasing trend aspect of the downlisting criteria, the number of chub
in these basins greatly exceeds the minimum required in the downlisting
criteria for both the number of populations and the number of
individual fish. Taken together, along with the 5-factor analyses
discussed above, it is clear that the status of the chub is likely far
more secure than it might be with 4,500 fish in 9 populations across 3
sub-basins with 5-year stable or increasing trends.
The number of populations has increased from 9 to 36 since the
species was listed in 1993; there are 16 large (>500 individuals)
populations with stable or increasing trends. The species is well
distributed throughout the Willamette Basin, and most of these
populations have some type of protective management and appear to be
viable as long as they are monitored and adaptively managed. Although
many of the threats have been reduced by recovery efforts, threatened
status is appropriate because the species is likely to become
endangered in the foreseeable future without the protections of the Act
or long-term management agreements and adaptive management actions. In
addition, concerns remain regarding the genetic implications of
managing Oregon chub in isolated ponds, cut off from potential
interactions with other populations in the basin.
Threats to existing habitats remain, including manipulation of
flows which can lead to desiccation, nutrient and pesticide runoff, and
vegetative succession in shallow pond environments. The chief threat to
existing Oregon chub populations is nonnative fish invasions, which may
occur as a result of flood events, intentional introductions, or
through connections between isolated chub habitats and adjacent
watercourses. However, as the status of the species has improved since
listing (i.e., more populations have been established and are being
managed to minimize threats), the relative effect of the threat of
predatory nonnative fishes has declined. Monitoring for nonnative fish
invasions and adaptively managing in response to such invasions is
necessary for the long-term viability of this species.
Significant Portion of the Range Analysis
Having determined that the Oregon chub is threatened throughout its
range, we next considered whether it is in danger of extinction in any
significant portions of its range.
The Act defines an endangered species as one ``in danger of
extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range,'' and
a threatened species as one ``likely to become an endangered species
within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion
of its range.'' The term ``significant portion of its range'' is not
defined by statute. For purposes of this finding, a significant portion
of a species' range is an area that is important to the conservation of
the species because it contributes meaningfully to the representation,
resiliency, or redundancy of the species. The contribution must be at a
level such that its loss would result in a decrease in the ability to
conserve the species.
The first step in determining whether a species is threatened or
endangered in a significant portion of its range is to identify any
portions of the range of the species that warrant further
consideration. The range of a species can theoretically be divided into
portions in an infinite number of ways. However, there is no purpose to
analyzing portions of the range that are not reasonably likely to be
significant and endangered. To identify only those portions that
warrant further consideration, we determine whether there is
substantial information indicating that: (1) The portions may be
significant, and (2) the species may be in danger of extinction there.
In practice, a key part of this analysis is whether the threats are
geographically concentrated in some way. If the threats to the species
are essentially uniform throughout its range, no portion warrants
further consideration. Moreover, if any concentration of threats
applies only to portions of the range that are unimportant to the
conservation of the species, such portions will not warrant further
consideration.
If we identify any portions of a species' range that warrant
further consideration, we then determine whether in fact the species is
threatened or endangered in any significant portion of its range.
Depending on the biology of the species, its range, and the threats it
faces, it may be more efficient in some cases for the Service to
address the significance question first, and in others the status
question first. Thus, if the Service determines that a portion of the
range is not significant, the Service need not determine whether the
species is threatened or endangered there. If the Service determines
that the species is not threatened or endangered in a portion of its
range, the Service need not determine if that portion is significant.
If the Service determines that both a portion of the range of a species
is significant and the species is threatened or endangered there, the
Service will specify that portion of the range where the species is in
danger of extinction pursuant to section 4(c)(1) of the Act.
The terms ``resiliency,'' ``redundancy,'' and ``representation''
are intended to be indicators of the conservation value of portions of
the species' range. Resiliency allows the species to recover from
periodic disturbance. A species will likely be more resilient if large
populations exist in high-quality habitat that is distributed
throughout the range of the species in such a way as to capture the
environmental variability within the range of the species. It is likely
that the larger size of a population will help contribute to the
viability of the species. Thus, a portion of the range of a species may
make a meaningful contribution to the resiliency of the species if the
area is relatively large and contains particularly high-quality habitat
or if its location or characteristics make it less susceptible to
certain threats than other
[[Page 22879]]
portions of the range. When evaluating whether or how a portion of the
range contributes to resiliency of the species, it may help to evaluate
the historical value of the portion and how frequently the portion is
used by the species. In addition, the portion may contribute to
resiliency for other reasons--for instance, it may contain an important
concentration of certain types of habitat that are necessary for the
species to carry out its life-history functions, such as breeding,
feeding, migration, dispersal, or wintering.
Redundancy of populations may be needed to provide a margin of
safety for the species to withstand catastrophic events. This does not
mean that any portion that provides redundancy is a significant portion
of the range of a species. The idea is to conserve enough areas of the
range such that random perturbations in the system act on only a few
populations. Therefore, each area must be examined based on whether
that area provides an increment of redundancy that is important to the
conservation of the species.
Adequate representation ensures that the species' adaptive
capabilities are conserved. Specifically, the portion should be
evaluated to see how it contributes to the genetic diversity of the
species. The loss of genetic diversity may substantially reduce the
ability of the species to respond and adapt to future environmental
changes. A peripheral population may contribute meaningfully to
representation if there is evidence that it provides genetic diversity
due to its location on the margin of the species' habitat requirements.
Applying the process described above, we evaluated the range of the
Oregon chub to determine if any units could be considered a significant
portion of its range. A case could be made that each of the three sub-
basins discussed in the recovery plan (Mainstem Willamette River,
Middle Fork Willamette, and Santiam River) (U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service 1998, pp. 27-28) are significant portions of the range of the
Oregon chub. As discussed above, a portion of a species' range is
significant if it is part of the current range of the species and is
important to the conservation of the species because it contributes
meaningfully to the representation, resiliency, or redundancy of the
species. The contribution must be at a level such that its loss would
result in a decrease in the ability to conserve the species. Each of
the three sub-basins clearly meets these criteria, as described in the
recovery plan (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1998, pp. 27-28).
Next we must determine if the threats to the Oregon chub are
nonuniformly distributed, such that populations in any of the sub-
basins experience a higher level of threat than populations in any
other sub-basin. The primary remaining threats to the species are
introduction of predatory nonnative fishes into chub ponds and water
quality degradation. Extensive surveys of the Willamette Basin have
found that predatory nonnative fishes are abundant and widespread in
each of the sub-basins (Scheerer 2007, p. 97). Threats to water
quality, including chemical spills, agricultural runoff, and drought,
are not restricted to any portion of the Oregon chub's range, and are
equally likely to occur in any of the three sub-basins. The threats
associated with reduced genetic exchange among populations are not yet
well understood; it seems likely, however, that the potential genetic
consequences of management for isolated populations (e.g., inbreeding
and genetic drift) could be experienced across the range of the
species, since protection of isolated ponds is the management goal for
populations in all three of the sub-basins.
In summary, the primary threats to the Oregon chub are relatively
uniform throughout the species' range. We have determined that none of
the existing or potential threats, either alone or in combination with
others, currently place the Oregon chub in danger of extinction
throughout all or a significant portion of its range. However, without
the continued protections of the Act or long-term management
agreements, the Oregon chub is likely to become endangered throughout
its range in the foreseeable future. Threatened status is therefore
appropriate for the Oregon chub throughout its entire range.
Effects of This Rule
If this proposed rule is made final, it would revise 50 CFR
17.11(h) to reclassify the Oregon chub from endangered to threatened on
the List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife. However, this
reclassification does not significantly change the protection afforded
this species under the Act. The regulatory protections of section 9 and
section 7 of the Act (see Factor D, above) would remain in place.
Anyone taking, attempting to take, or otherwise possessing Oregon chub,
or parts thereof, in violation of section 9 is subject to a penalty
under section 11 of the Act. Pursuant to section 7 of the Act, all
Federal agencies must ensure that any actions they authorize, fund, or
carry out are not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of the
Oregon chub. Whenever a species is listed as threatened, the Act allows
promulgation of special rules under section 4(d) that modify the
standard protections for threatened species found under section 9 of
the Act and Service regulations at 50 CFR 17.31 and 17.71, when it is
deemed necessary and advisable to provide for the conservation of the
species. There are no 4(d) rules in place or proposed for the Oregon
chub, because there is currently no conservation need to do so for the
species. This reclassification would have no effect on the current
proposal to designate critical habitat for the Oregon chub.
Peer Review
In accordance with our policy published in the Federal Register on
July 1, 1994 (59 FR 34270), and the Office of Management and Budget's
Final Information Quality Bulletin for Peer Review, dated December 16,
2004, we will seek the expert opinions of at least three appropriate
and independent specialists regarding the science in this proposed
rule. We will invite these peer reviewers to comment, during the public
comment period, on the specific assumptions and conclusions regarding
the proposed downlisting. We will consider all comments and information
received during the comment period on this proposed rule during
preparation of a final rulemaking. Accordingly, the final decision may
differ from this proposal.
Public Hearings
Section 4(b)(5)(D) of the Act requires that we hold one public
hearing on this proposal, if requested. Requests must be received
within 45 days of the date of publication of the proposal in the
Federal Register (see DATES). Such requests must be made in writing and
be addressed to the Field Supervisor at the address in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section above.
Clarity of This Proposed Rule
We are required by Executive Orders 12866 and 12988 and by the
Presidential Memorandum of June 1, 1998, to write all rules in plain
language. This means that each rule we publish must:
(a) Be logically organized;
(b) Use the active voice to address readers directly;
(c) Use clear language rather than jargon;
(d) Be divided into short sections and sentences; and
(e) Use lists and tables wherever possible.
If you feel that we have not met these requirements, send us
comments by one
[[Page 22880]]
of the methods listed in the ADDRESSES section. To better help us
revise the rule, your comments should be as specific as possible. For
example, you should tell us the numbers of the sections or paragraphs
that are unclearly written, which sections or sentences are too long,
the sections where you feel lists or tables would be useful, etc.
Required Determinations
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) regulations at 5 CFR part
1320, which implement provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), require that Federal agencies obtain approval
from OMB before collecting information from the public. This rule does
not contain any new collections of information that require approval by
OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act. This rule will not impose
recordkeeping or reporting requirements on State or local governments,
individuals, businesses, or organizations. An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number.
National Environmental Policy Act
We have determined we do not need to prepare an Environmental
Assessment or an Environmental Impact Statement, as defined under the
authority of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.), in connection with regulations adopted pursuant to
section 4(a) of the Act. We published a notice outlining our reasons
for this determination in the Federal Register on October 25, 1983 (48
FR 49244).
References Cited
A complete list of all references cited herein is available upon
request from the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Office (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT).
Author
The primary authors of this document are Cat Brown and Doug Baus at
the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Office in Portland, Oregon (see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 17
Endangered and threatened species, Exports, Imports, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, and Transportation.
Proposed Regulation Promulgation
Accordingly, we hereby propose to amend part 17, subchapter B of
chapter I, title 50 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as set forth
below:
PART 17--[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 17 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1361-1407; 16 U.S.C. 1531-1544; 16 U.S.C.
4201-4245; Pub. L. 99-625, 100 Stat. 3500; unless otherwise noted.
2. Amend Sec. 17.11(h) by revising the entry for ``Chub, Oregon''
under FISHES in the List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife to read
as follows:
Sec. 17.11 Endangered and threatened wildlife.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
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Species Vertebrate
------------------------------------------------------------ population where When Critical Special
Historic range endangered or Status listed habitat rules
Common name Scientific name threatened
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
Fishes
* * * * * * *
Chub, Oregon....................... Oregonichthys crameri. U.S.A. (OR)........... Entire.......... T 520 NA NA
* * * * * * *
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* * * * *
Dated: May 8, 2009.
Rowan W. Gould,
Acting Director, Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. E9-11322 Filed 5-14-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P