LISTED SPECIES1 DOCUMENTED IN ST. LUCIE COUNTY

Designated Status Habitat Species Species Habitat Preference Available in Documented in 2 3 4 FWS FDA FWC Project Area? Project Area?5 Sand-dune spurge NL E Dry, sandy conditions No No Chamaesyce cumulicola Piedmont jointgrass NL T Herbaceous wetlands within karst areas Yes No Coelorachis tuberculosa Large flowered rosemary NL T Dunes with deep sandy soils near the coast No No Conradina grandiflora Lakela’s balm Dicerandra immaculate var. NL E White- and yellow-sand scrub habitats No No immaculata Coastal vervain Back dunes, dune swales and coastal NL E No No Glandularia maritima hammocks Johnson’s seagrass Tidal deltas, sandy shoals, mouths of T E No No Halophila johnsonii canals, shallow intertidal areas Scrubby flatwoods and xeric hammocks Fragrant prickly apple E E with sand live oak, myrtle oak, cabbage No No fragrans palm and prickly pear Sea rosemary NL E Coastal uplands, dunes No No Heliotropium gnaphalodes Nodding pinweed Deep sands, usually ancient dunes, with NL T No No Lechea cernua evergreen scrub oaks. Burrowing four o’clock NL E Ocean side of coastal dunes No No Okenia hypogaea Blunt leaved peperomia Rockland hammocks, hydric hammocks, NL E Yes No Peperomia obtusifolia strand swamps Tiny polygala Pine rockland, scrub, sandhill and open E E No No Polygala smallii coastal spoil piles Giant orchid Sandhill, scrub, pine flatwoods, pine NL T No No Pteroglossaspis ecristata rocklands. Scrub bluestem White patches in rosemary scrub, oak and NL E No No Schizachyrium niveum pine scrub Coastal hoary-pea Tephrosia angustissima var. NL E Scrub and sandy areas No No curtissii

Page 1 of 5 Exhibit 3.2 Application 180918-845 Page 1 of 5 LISTED SPECIES1 DOCUMENTED IN ST. LUCIE COUNTY

Designated Status Habitat Species Species Habitat Preference Available in Documented in 2 3 4 FWS FDA FWC Project Area? Project Area?5 Fish Striped croaker NL SC Rock-reef habitats with attached algae No No Bairdiella sanctaeluciae Opossum pipefish NL SC River mouths, tidal rivers, lagoons No No Microphis brachyrus Mangrove rivulus NL SC Mangrove forests No No Rivulus marmoratus Butterflies and Moths Miami blue butterfly Tropical hardwood hammocks, beachside Cyclargus thomasi E FE No No scrub and tropical pine rocklands bethunebakeri Reptiles American alligator Lakes, ponds, areas of deep, slow moving SAT FT (S/A) Yes Yes Alligator mississippiensis rivers Loggerhead sea turtle T FT Marine coastal and oceanic waters No No Caretta caretta Green sea turtle T FT Marine coastal and oceanic waters No No Chelonia mydas Leatherback sea turtle E FE Marine coastal and oceanic waters No No Dermochelys coriacea Eastern indigo snake Scrub and sandhill to wet prairies and T FT Yes No Drymarchon corais couperi mangrove swamps Hawksbill sea turtle E FE Marine coastal and oceanic waters No No Eretmochelys imbricata Gopher tortoise Dry uplands, sandhills, scrub, xeric oak C ST Yes No Gopherus polyphemus hammock, pastures, and roadsides Kemp’s ridley sea turtle E FE Marine coastal and oceanic waters No No Lepidochelys kempii Pine snake Open canopies with dry sandy soils, old NL ST No No Pituophis melanoleucus fields and pastures Birds scrub jay Fire-dominated, low-growing, oak scrub T FT No No Aphelocoma coerulescens habitat found on well-drained sandy soils

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Designated Status Habitat Species Species Habitat Preference Available in Documented in 2 3 4 FWS FDA FWC Project Area? Project Area?5 High, sparsely vegetated, sandy ground. Florida burrowing owl NL T Natural habitats include dry prairie and No No Athene cunicularia floridana sandhill. Dry prairie and pasture lands with cabbage palm, cabbage palm/live oak hammocks, Crested caracara T FT and shallow ponds and sloughs. Preferred Yes Yes Caracara cheriway nest trees are cabbage palms, followed by live oaks. Piping plover Found on open, sandy beaches and on tidal T FT No No Charadrius melodus mudflats and sandflats along both coasts Kirtland’s warbler E FE Nests in young jack pine stands No No Setophaga kirtlandii Permanently and seasonally flooded Little blue heron NL T wetlands, streams, lakes, and swamps, and Yes Yes Egretta caerulea in manmade impoundments and ditches Permanently and seasonally flooded Tricolored heron NL T wetlands, streams, lakes, and swamps, and Yes Yes Egretta tricolor in manmade impoundments and ditches Southeastern American kestrel Open pine habitats, woodland edges, NL T Yes Yes Falco sparverius paulus prairies and pastures Florida sandhill crane NL T Prairies, freshwater marshes, and pastures Yes Yes Antigone canadensis pratensis American oystercatcher Beach, sandbar, mud flat, and shellfish NL T No No Haematopus palliatus beds Nests in inundated forested wetlands. Wood stork T FT Forages in freshwater marshes, swamps, Yes Yes Mycteria americana flooded pastures Red-cockaded Open, mature pine woodlands that have a E FE No No Picoides borealis diversity of grass, forb, and shrub species Large, contiguous forests with numerous large trees. A significant portion of the Ivory-billed woodpecker forest must also be in some stage of decay, E FE No No Campephilus principalis providing a continuous supply of food. Bottomland hardwood forests are frequently noted as important.

Page 3 of 5 Exhibit 3.2 Application 180918-845 Page 3 of 5 LISTED SPECIES1 DOCUMENTED IN ST. LUCIE COUNTY

Designated Status Habitat Species Species Habitat Preference Available in Documented in 2 3 4 FWS FDA FWC Project Area? Project Area?5 Marine tidal flats and ponds, coastal Roseate spoonbill NL T marshes, mangrove-dominated inlets and Yes Yes Platalea ajaja pools, and freshwater sloughs and marshes Everglades snail kite Shallow vegetated edges of natural and Rostrhamus sociabilis E FE manmade lakes where apple snails can be Yes Yes plumbeus found Black skimmer Coastal waters, including beaches, bays, NL T No No Rynchops niger estuaries, sandbars, tidal creeks Found primarily in intertidal, marine Red knot T FT habitats, especially near coastal inlets, No No Calidris canutus rufa estuaries, and bays Least tern NL T Coastal shallow habitats and shorelines No No Sternula antillarum Mammals Southeastern beach mouse Sand dunes covered with grasses and forbs, Peromyscus polionotus T FT No No coastal strand scrub niveiventris Cypress forests, thickets, freshwater Florida panther E FE marshes, hardwood hammocks, saw Yes No Puma concolor coryi palmetto woodlands Sherman’s fox squirrel Sandhills, pine flatwoods, pastures, open NL SSC No No Sciurus niger shermani woods West Indian manatee T FT Coastal waters, bays, estuaries, and rivers No No Trichechus manatus Other Species of Concern Bald eagle Nests in tall trees. Forages near bodies of NL6 NL6 Yes No Haliaeetus leucocephalus water. Florida black bear NL NL7 Forested communities, including wetlands Yes No Ursus americanus floridanus 1As reported by the FNAI “FNAI Tracking List, St Lucie County” http://www.fnai.org. FNAI, March 2018 and FWS- IPAC (https://ecos.fws.goc/ipac/location/ YGA7N7FICRFXTDXTUETODNNACE/resources) 2 and animal species listed by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants, 50 CFR 17.11 and 17.12; FWS Environmental Conservation Online System Species Reports- Species by County Report (http://ecos.fws.gov/ecos/home.action). 3 Plant species listed by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services pursuant to Chapter 5B-40, F.A.C. 4 Animal species listed by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission pursuant to Rule 68A-27 F.A.C.

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5 Documented presence in the project area based on reported occurrences by FNAI (FNAI, 2018) or visually observed during field reviews. 6 The bald eagle is neither state nor federally listed; however, this species is federally protected by the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. The bald eagle is also managed in Florida by the FWC's bald eagle rule (FAC. 68A-16.002). 7 The Florida black bear is no longer state-listed; however, this species is managed in Florida by the FWC’s Florida Black Bear Conservation rule (68A-4.009, F.A.C.).

NL – Not Listed; E – Endangered; T – Threatened; SSC – Species of Special Concern; C-Candidate; F – Federally; T(S/A) – Threatened due to similarity in appearance

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