Fish
and Wildlife Service Extends Deadline on Public Review of Draft Recovery
Plan for Two SF Plants
March 21,
2002
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Contact:
Patricia Foulk, Sacramento, California - 916/414-6566
FISH AND WILDLIFE
SERVICE EXTENDS DEADLINE ON PUBLIC REVIEW OF DRAFT RECOVERY PLAN FOR
TWO SF PLANTS
Public Meetings Planned for Presidio in April
SACRAMENTO, California
- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has extended the deadline until May
6, 2002, for comments on its December 2001 draft recovery plan for two species
of rare California native plants found only on the northern San Francisco
peninsula.
In addition, the
Service will hold two additional public workshops in San Francisco on April
2 and April 3. Both meetings will run from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. and take
place in the Ventana Room of the Golden Gate Club, located on the Presidio
at 135 Fisher Loop.
The plan features
two federally endangered plants, San Francisco lessingia, an annual herb
in the aster family, and Ravens manzanita (also known as Presidio
manzanita), a rare evergreen creeping shrub restricted to a few outcrops
of mostly serpentine rock. San Francisco lessingia grows on sparsely vegetated
coastal dunes and exists at only six sites in the Presidio and one site
in Daly City. Only one genetic individual remains of the Ravens manzanita.
This "mother" plant is located in the Presidio with propagated
clones of this plant growing near the mother plant and other serpentine
locations. Habitat loss is the primary reason for the decline of these plants.
Three recovery units
for San Francisco lessingia are proposed including lands located on the
Presidio and owned and managed by the National Park Service (NPS) and the
Presidio Trust; NPS-managed lands at Fort Funston; and a reserve on private
and municipal land in Daly City; and smaller "satellite" reserves
on undeveloped private and municipal lands in San Francisco. The principal
reserve for Ravens manzanita remains the site of the original plant
in the Presidio. Other proposed reserves for Ravens manzanita are
along the Presidios north shore landslides, outcrops and bluffs; and
multiple hilltop bedrock outcrops on municipal and private lands in San
Francisco.
Among the proposals
included in the plan is the removal of non-native trees within the footprint
of the Presidio Recovery Unit. This proposed tree removal would have esthetic
impacts: it would open up views of the Golden Gate and rolling dune topography
with extensive wildflower displays, but it would also make areas currently
screened from view visible, and it would remove dark evergreen horizons
familiar for generations. The plan does not propose to exclude public access
from restored habitats; instead it recommends ways to integrate public access
and habitat management by developing "rotational trails" (paths
that alternate between open periods with disturbed, trampled sand, and temporary
closures to allow natural revegetation) at both the Presidio and Fort Funston
recovery units.
Several other federally-listed
species that share habitats with these two plant species are also addressed
in this plan. They include the beach layia, Presidio clarkia, Marin dwarf-flax,
Myrtles silverspot butterfly and the bay checkerspot butterfly. In
addition, the plan focuses on the needs of 16 plant species of concern--uncommon
to rare plants known to be at risk of local or regional extinction or outright
extinction, but which are currently neither candidates for listing nor proposed
for listing as threatened or endangered. The conservation needs of 17 additional
species of local or regional significance are also examined.
The goal of the
Endangered Species Act is to conserve the ecosystems upon which listed species
depend and to recover species to levels where protection under the Act is
no longer necessary. Recovery plans, which are blueprints for actions by
Federal and State agencies and private organizations, do not obligate the
expenditure of funds or require that actions be implemented.
Copies of the draft
recovery plan are available by contacting the Sacramento Fish and Wildlife
Office at the address below or by calling the Recovery Coordinator at (916)
414-6600. Copies of the plan will also be available at the April workshops.
Comments are invited
until May 6, 2002, and need to be submitted to the Field Supervisor, Sacramento
Fish and Wildlife Office, 2800 Cottage Way, W-2605, Sacramento, California
95825.
The U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service is the principal Federal agency responsible for conserving,
protecting and enhancing fish, wildlife and plants and their habitats
for the continuing benefit of the American people. The Service manages
the 94-million-acre National Wildlife Refuge System which encompasses
more than 535 national wildlife refuges, thousands of small wetlands and
other special management areas. It also operates 70 national fish hatcheries,
64 fishery resource offices and 78 ecological services field stations.
The agency enforces Federal wildlife laws, administers the Endangered
Species Act, manages migratory bird populations, restores nationally significant
fisheries, conserves and restores wildlife habitat such as wetlands, and
helps foreign governments with their conservation efforts. It also oversees
the Federal Aid program that distributes hundreds of millions of dollars
in excise taxes on fishing and hunting equipment to state fish and wildlife
agencies.
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