Biological Resources Supporting Data

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Biological Resources Supporting Data City of Pleasanton – East Pleasanton Specific Plan Project Draft EIR Appendix C: Biological Resources Supporting Data FirstCarbon Solutions H:\Client (PN-JN)\4230\42300001\EIR\4 - Screencheck DEIR\42300001 Sec 99-00 Appendix Dividers.doc Selected Elements by Scientific Name California Department of Fish and Wildlife California Natural Diversity Database Query Criteria: Quad is (Livermore (3712167)) Rare Plant Rank/CDFW Species Element Code Federal Status State Status Global Rank State Rank SSC or FP Agelaius tricolor ABPBXB0020 None None G2G3 S2 SSC tricolored blackbird Ambystoma californiense AAAAA01180 Threatened Threatened G2G3 S2S3 SSC California tiger salamander Athene cunicularia ABNSB10010 None None G4 S2 SSC burrowing owl Atriplex cordulata var. cordulata PDCHE040B0 None None G3T2 S2 1B.2 heartscale Atriplex depressa PDCHE042L0 None None G2 S2 1B.2 brittlescale Atriplex joaquinana PDCHE041F3 None None G2 S2 1B.2 San Joaquin spearscale Atriplex minuscula PDCHE042M0 None None G2 S2 1B.1 lesser saltscale Branchinecta lynchi ICBRA03030 Threatened None G3 S2S3 vernal pool fairy shrimp Buteo regalis ABNKC19120 None None G4 S3S4 WL ferruginous hawk Centromadia parryi ssp. congdonii PDAST4R0P1 None None G3T2 S2 1B.1 Congdon's tarplant Chloropyron palmatum PDSCR0J0J0 Endangered Endangered G1 S1 1B.1 palmate-bracted bird's-beak Corynorhinus townsendii AMACC08010 None Candidate G3G4 S2S3 SSC Threatened Townsend's big-eared bat Elanus leucurus ABNKC06010 None None G5 S3 FP white-tailed kite Emys marmorata ARAAD02030 None None G3G4 S3 SSC western pond turtle Eremophila alpestris actia ABPAT02011 None None G5T3Q S3 WL California horned lark Lasiurus cinereus AMACC05030 None None G5 S4? hoary bat Linderiella occidentalis ICBRA06010 None None G3 S2S3 California linderiella Navarretia prostrata PDPLM0C0Q0 None None G2 S2 1B.1 prostrate vernal pool navarretia Plagiobothrys glaber PDBOR0V0B0 None None GH SH 1A hairless popcornflower Rana boylii AAABH01050 None None G3 S2S3 SSC foothill yellow-legged frog Commercial Version -- Dated November, 5 2013 -- Biogeographic Data Branch Page 1 of 2 Report Printed on Thursday, November 21, 2013 Information Expires 5/5/2014 Selected Elements by Scientific Name California Department of Fish and Wildlife California Natural Diversity Database Rare Plant Rank/CDFW Species Element Code Federal Status State Status Global Rank State Rank SSC or FP Rana draytonii AAABH01022 Threatened None G2G3 S2S3 SSC California red-legged frog Sycamore Alluvial Woodland CTT62100CA None None G1 S1.1 Sycamore Alluvial Woodland Taxidea taxus AMAJF04010 None None G5 S4 SSC American badger Trifolium hydrophilum PDFAB400R5 None None G2 S2 1B.2 saline clover Tropidocarpum capparideum PDBRA2R010 None None G1 S1 1B.1 caper-fruited tropidocarpum Valley Sink Scrub CTT36210CA None None G1 S1.1 Valley Sink Scrub Vulpes macrotis mutica AMAJA03041 Endangered Threatened G4T2T3 S2S3 San Joaquin kit fox Record Count: 27 Commercial Version -- Dated November, 5 2013 -- Biogeographic Data Branch Page 2 of 2 Report Printed on Thursday, November 21, 2013 Information Expires 5/5/2014 Plant List 10 matches found. Click on scientific name for details Search Criteria Found in Quad 37121F7 Rare Plant State Global Scientific Name Common Name Family Lifeform Rank Rank Rank Atriplex cordulata var. heartscale Chenopodiaceae annual herb 1B.2 S2.2? G3T2 cordulata Atriplex coronata var. crownscale Chenopodiaceae annual herb 4.2 S3.2 G4T3 coronata Atriplex depressa brittlescale Chenopodiaceae annual herb 1B.2 S2.2 G2Q Atriplex joaquinana San Joaquin spearscale Chenopodiaceae annual herb 1B.2 S2 G2 Atriplex minuscula lesser saltscale Chenopodiaceae annual herb 1B.1 S2 G2 Balsamorhiza macrolepis big-scale balsamroot Asteraceae perennial herb 1B.2 S2 G2 Centromadia parryi ssp. Congdon's tarplant Asteraceae annual herb 1B.1 S2 G3T2 congdonii palmate-bracted bird's- annual herb Chloropyron palmatum Orobanchaceae 1B.1 S1 G1 beak (hemiparasitic) prostrate vernal pool Navarretia prostrata Polemoniaceae annual herb 1B.1 S2 G2 navarretia Trifolium hydrophilum saline clover Fabaceae annual herb 1B.2 S2 G2 Suggested Citation California Native Plant Society (CNPS). 2013. Inventory of Rare and Endangered Plants (online edition, v8- 02). California Native Plant Society. Sacramento, CA. Accessed on Thursday, November 21, 2013. Search the Inventory Information Contributors Simple Search About the Inventory The Calflora Database Advanced Search About the Rare Plant Program Glossary CNPS Home Page About CNPS Join CNPS © Copyright 2010 California Native Plant Society. All rights reserved. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Sacramento Fish & Wildlife Office Federal Endangered and Threatened Species that Occur in or may be Affected by Projects in the LIVERMORE (446A) U.S.G.S. 7 1/2 Minute Quad Database last updated: September 18, 2011 Report Date: November 21, 2013 Listed Species Invertebrates Branchinecta conservatio Conservancy fairy shrimp (E) Branchinecta longiantenna longhorn fairy shrimp (E) Branchinecta lynchi Critical habitat, vernal pool fairy shrimp (X) vernal pool fairy shrimp (T) Fish Hypomesus transpacificus delta smelt (T) Oncorhynchus mykiss Central California Coastal steelhead (T) (NMFS) Central Valley steelhead (T) (NMFS) Amphibians Ambystoma californiense California tiger salamander, central population (T) Critical habitat, CA tiger salamander, central population (X) Rana draytonii California red-legged frog (T) Critical habitat, California red-legged frog (X) Reptiles Masticophis lateralis euryxanthus Alameda whipsnake [=striped racer] (T) Birds Sternula antillarum (=Sterna, =albifrons) browni Sternula antillarum (=Sterna, =albifrons) browni California least tern (E) Mammals Vulpes macrotis mutica San Joaquin kit fox (E) Plants Cordylanthus palmatus palmate-bracted bird's-beak (E) Key: (E) Endangered - Listed as being in danger of extinction. (T) Threatened - Listed as likely to become endangered within the foreseeable future. (P) Proposed - Officially proposed in the Federal Register for listing as endangered or threatened. (NMFS) Species under the Jurisdiction of the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration Fisheries Service. Consult with them directly about these species. Critical Habitat - Area essential to the conservation of a species. (PX) Proposed Critical Habitat - The species is already listed. Critical habitat is being proposed for it. (C) Candidate - Candidate to become a proposed species. (V) Vacated by a court order. Not currently in effect. Being reviewed by the Service. (X) Critical Habitat designated for this species.
Recommended publications
  • Outline of Angiosperm Phylogeny
    Outline of angiosperm phylogeny: orders, families, and representative genera with emphasis on Oregon native plants Priscilla Spears December 2013 The following listing gives an introduction to the phylogenetic classification of the flowering plants that has emerged in recent decades, and which is based on nucleic acid sequences as well as morphological and developmental data. This listing emphasizes temperate families of the Northern Hemisphere and is meant as an overview with examples of Oregon native plants. It includes many exotic genera that are grown in Oregon as ornamentals plus other plants of interest worldwide. The genera that are Oregon natives are printed in a blue font. Genera that are exotics are shown in black, however genera in blue may also contain non-native species. Names separated by a slash are alternatives or else the nomenclature is in flux. When several genera have the same common name, the names are separated by commas. The order of the family names is from the linear listing of families in the APG III report. For further information, see the references on the last page. Basal Angiosperms (ANITA grade) Amborellales Amborellaceae, sole family, the earliest branch of flowering plants, a shrub native to New Caledonia – Amborella Nymphaeales Hydatellaceae – aquatics from Australasia, previously classified as a grass Cabombaceae (water shield – Brasenia, fanwort – Cabomba) Nymphaeaceae (water lilies – Nymphaea; pond lilies – Nuphar) Austrobaileyales Schisandraceae (wild sarsaparilla, star vine – Schisandra; Japanese
    [Show full text]
  • Biotic Evaluation Dias and Hobbs City of Fremont
    BIOTIC EVALUATION DIAS AND HOBBS CITY OF FREMONT, ALAMEDA COUNTY, CALIFORNIA By: LIVE OAK ASSOCIATES, INC. Rick Hopkins, Ph.D., Principal, Senior Ecologist Pamela Peterson, Sr. Project Manager, Plant/Wetland Ecologist Katrina Krakow, M.S., Project Manager, Staff Ecologist For: Robson Homes Attn: Jake Lavin 2185 The Alameda, Suite 150 San Jose, CA 95126 April 3, 2014 Project No. 1821-01 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................... 4 2.0 EXISTING CONDITIONS .......................................................................................... 8 2.1 BIOTIC HABITATS/LAND USES .................................................................................................................... 10 2.1.1 PASTURE ...................................................................................................................................................... 10 2.1.2 RUDERAL FIELD ........................................................................................................................................ 13 2.1.3 DEVELOPED ................................................................................................................................................ 14 2.1.3 EUCALYPTUS GROVE ............................................................................................................................... 15 2.2 MOVEMENT CORRIDORS ............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Federal Register/Vol. 79, No. 38/Wednesday, February 26, 2014
    10830 Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 38 / Wednesday, February 26, 2014 / Notices as contract area, property state/city/ (iv.) In relation to appeals of initial Background county/zip code, HUD Homeownership denials, HUD, Departmental Privacy Recovery of endangered or threatened Center), contractor ID/name, or Appeals Officer, Office of General animals and plants to the point where nonprofit/government agency name. No Counsel, 451 Seventh Street SW., they are again secure, self-sustaining paper based records. Washington, DC 20410. members of their ecosystems is a SAFEGUARDS: RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES: primary goal of our endangered species program and the Endangered Species Records are maintained in a secured Purchasers, Brokers, appraisers, computer network. Access is limited to Act of 1973, as amended (Act; 16 U.S.C. contractors, Nonprofit/Government 1531 et seq.). Recovery means authorized personnel. ADAMS (P260) entities, and HUD employees. access requires two levels of logins to improvement of the status of listed access the system. The first login uses EXEMPTIONS FROM CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF THE species to the point at which listing is HUD Siteminder system to verify that ACT: no longer appropriate under the criteria the user has active HUD authorization. None. specified in section 4(a)(1) of the Act. The Act requires the development of The second login uses ADAMS (P260) [FR Doc. 2014–04203 Filed 2–25–14; 8:45 am] internal security system to set recovery plans for listed species, unless BILLING CODE 4210–67–P permissions for data access and system such a plan would not promote the functionality. No paper based records.
    [Show full text]
  • CV November 2011
    David C. Tank College of Natural Resources & Stillinger Herbarium, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID Tel: 208.885.7033 [email protected] http://phylodiversity.net/dtank/ ACADEMIC EMPLOYMENT Assistant Professor & Director, Stillinger Herbarium July 2008-present College of Natural Resources Affiliated faculty, Environmental Sciences University of Idaho, Moscow, ID Postdoctoral Associate 2006-2008 Division of Botany, Peabody Museum of Natural History Yale University, New Haven, CT Supervisor: Dr. Michael Donoghue Interim Collections Manager 2007 Division of Botany, Peabody Museum of Natural History Yale University, New Haven, CT Lecturer 2007 Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology Yale University, New Haven, CT EDUCATION Ph.D., Botany 2006 University of Washington, Seattle, WA Advisor: Dr. Richard Olmstead dissertation - Molecular phylogenetics of Castilleja and Castillejinae (Orobanchaceae) M.S., Botany & Plant Pathology; Specialization in Ecology, Evolutionary Biology & Behavior 2000 Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI Advisor: Dr. Tao Sang thesis - Evolution and phylogenetic utility of low-copy nuclear genes: examples from conifers and peonies B.S., Botany & Plant Pathology; with honors, summa cum laude 1998 Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI TEACHING EXPERIENCE Assistant Professor, University of Idaho 2008-present Dendrology (2008-2011; undergraduate lecture/lab), Field Botany (2011; undergraduate short course), Conser- vation Genetics (2010; graduate lecture/lab; team taught with L. Waits), Phylogenetics Reading Group
    [Show full text]
  • Site Locations and Description
    April 29, 2019 11719 Amy Newby Director, Parks & Recreation City of San Carlos 600 Elm Street San Carlos, California 94070 Subject: Biological Resources Constraints Assessment for the City of San Carlos Fuel Management Project, San Carlos, San Mateo County, California Dear Ms. Newby: At the request of the City of San Carlos, Dudek conducted a biological constraints assessment for the proposed Fuel Management Project (project) that includes four distinct public parks in the City of San Carlos, San Mateo County, California: Big Canyon Park, Crestview Park, Eaton Park, and Highlands Park (Figures 1 and 2). The currently proposed project would entail a series of vegetation management activities that will abate hazardous vegetation in the four city parks. These parks are largely undeveloped with walking trails that intersect the landscape. Specific goals of the vegetation management project include the following: (1) conduct targeted fuel reduction treatments using hand crews, masticators, track chippers, herbicides, and herbivory to reduce highly combustible underbrush and chaparral within the defensible space zone of adjacent private ownerships, (2) create strategic fuel breaks using hand crews, masticators, track chippers, and herbivory to reduce highly combustible underbrush and chaparral along access roads and ridgelines, and (3) remove dead/diseased and non-native trees as part of a comprehensive fuel reduction effort. As part of the assessment, a reconnaissance-level field survey was conducted to identify and characterize existing biological conditions within the project site including the nature and extent of both common and sensitive natural vegetation communities, wetlands and other aquatic features potentially under the jurisdiction of state and federal resource agencies, and the potential for special-status plant and animal species to occur.
    [Show full text]
  • Bob Allen's OCCNPS Presentation About Plant Families.Pages
    Stigma How to identify flowering plants Style Pistil Bob Allen, California Native Plant Society, OC chapter, occnps.org Ovary Must-knows • Flower, fruit, & seed • Leaf parts, shapes, & divisions Petal (Corolla) Anther Stamen Filament Sepal (Calyx) Nectary Receptacle Stalk Major local groups ©Bob Allen 2017 Apr 18 Page !1 of !6 A Botanist’s Dozen Local Families Legend: * = non-native; (*) = some native species, some non-native species; ☠ = poisonous Eudicots • Leaf venation branched; veins net-like • Leaf bases not sheathed (sheathed only in Apiaceae) • Cotyledons 2 per seed • Floral parts in four’s or five’s Pollen apertures 3 or more per pollen grain Petal tips often • curled inward • Central taproot persists 2 styles atop a flat disk Apiaceae - Carrot & Parsley Family • Herbaceous annuals & perennials, geophytes, woody perennials, & creepers 5 stamens • Stout taproot in most • Leaf bases sheathed • Leaves alternate (rarely opposite), dissected to compound Style “horns” • Flowers in umbels, often then in a secondary umbel • Sepals, petals, stamens 5 • Ovary inferior, with 2 chambers; styles 2; fruit a dry schizocarp Often • CA: Apiastrum, Yabea, Apium*, Berula, Bowlesia, Cicuta, Conium*☠ , Daucus(*), vertically Eryngium, Foeniculum, Torilis*, Perideridia, Osmorhiza, Lomatium, Sanicula, Tauschia ribbed • Cult: Apium, Carum, Daucus, Petroselinum Asteraceae - Sunflower Family • Inflorescence a head: flowers subtended by an involucre of bracts (phyllaries) • Calyx modified into a pappus • Corolla of 5 fused petals, radial or bilateral, sometimes both kinds in same head • Radial (disk) corollas rotate to salverform • Bilateral (ligulate) corollas strap-shaped • Stamens 5, filaments fused to corolla, anthers fused into a tube surrounding the style • Ovary inferior, style 1, with 2 style branches • Fruit a cypsela (but sometimes called an achene) • The largest family of flowering plants in CA (ca.
    [Show full text]
  • OFR 2018–1175: Population Genomic Surveys of Six Rare Plant Species
    Prepared in cooperation with the San Diego Association of Governments Population Genomic Surveys for Six Rare Plant Species in San Diego County, California Open-File Report 2018–1175 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Cover photographs: Top Left: Acanthomintha ilicifolia (San Diego thornmint). Photograph by Margie Mulligan, 2016–17, San Diego County, California. Top Middle: Baccharis vanessae (Encinitas baccharis). Photograph by Jon Rebman, 2016–17, San Diego County, California. Top Right: Dicranostegia orcuttiana (Orcutt’s bird’s-beak). Photograph by Margie Mulligan, 2016–17, San Diego County, California. Bottom Left: Chloropyron maritimum ssp. maritimum (salt marsh bird’s-beak). Photograph by Margie Mulligan, 2016–17, San Diego County, California. Bottom Middle: Deinandra conjugens (Otay tarplant). Photograph by Margie Mulligan, 2016–17, San Diego County, California. Bottom Right: Monardella viminea (willowy monardella). Photograph by Margie Mulligan, 2016–17, San Diego County, California. Back: Field of Chloropyron maritimum ssp. maritimus (salt marsh bird’s-beak) at Dog Beach in Ocean Beach. Photograph by E.R. Milano, July 21, 2017, San Deigo, California. Prepared in cooperation with the San Diego Association of Governments Population Genomic Surveys of Six Rare Plant Species in San Diego County, California By Elizabeth R. Milano and Amy G. Vandergast Open-File Report 2018–1175 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior RYAN K. ZINKE, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey James F. Reilly II, Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2018 For more information on the USGS—the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment—visit https://www.usgs.gov/ or call 1–888–ASK–USGS (1–888–275–8747).
    [Show full text]
  • Controlling Invasive Sea Lavender in Carpenteria Salt Marsh
    NEWSLETTER OF THE CALIFORNIA INVASIVE PLANT COUNCIL Controlling Invasive Sea Lavender 4 Comprehensive island restoration in Mexico 6 Stop the spread of weeds and soil pathogens 8 Managed relocation under a changing climate 10 2018 Cal-IPC Symposium 11 Snapshots from the field 12 VOLUME 26 NUMBER 1 SPRING 2018 FROM THE DIRECTOR’S DESK Working the halls in Sacramento By Executive Director Doug Johnson ach spring, Cal-IPC visits Sacra- tion has made it onto the radar screen of mento with the goal of renewing elected officials. 1442-A Walnut Street, #462 funding for Weed Management An Invasive Species Summit was held Berkeley, CA 94709 E ph (510) 843-3902 fax (510) 217-3500 Areas (WMAs), local efforts where land in the capitol in January, bringing togeth- cal-ipc.org [email protected] management partners work collab- er experts from government, industry, Protecting California’s environment and oratively to stop the spread of invasive academia, and conservation groups to economy from invasive plants plants. In 2014, we worked with Assem- discuss ways to speed implementation of STAFF bly Member Joan Buchanan to get AB the state’s framework on invasive species. Doug Johnson, Executive Director Agustín Luna, Director of Finance, 2402 passed. Though the bill succeeded The framework was created by the state’s Operations & Administration in updating the program design, it failed Invasive Species Advisory Committee Bertha McKinley, Program Assistant Claire F. Meyler, Communications & Marketing Manager to secure funding. Last year, we worked (CISAC) and interagency Invasive Species Dana Morawitz, Conservation Program Manager with Assembly Member Jim Wood on Council (ISCC) in 2012.
    [Show full text]
  • Lamiales – Synoptical Classification Vers
    Lamiales – Synoptical classification vers. 2.6.2 (in prog.) Updated: 12 April, 2016 A Synoptical Classification of the Lamiales Version 2.6.2 (This is a working document) Compiled by Richard Olmstead With the help of: D. Albach, P. Beardsley, D. Bedigian, B. Bremer, P. Cantino, J. Chau, J. L. Clark, B. Drew, P. Garnock- Jones, S. Grose (Heydler), R. Harley, H.-D. Ihlenfeldt, B. Li, L. Lohmann, S. Mathews, L. McDade, K. Müller, E. Norman, N. O’Leary, B. Oxelman, J. Reveal, R. Scotland, J. Smith, D. Tank, E. Tripp, S. Wagstaff, E. Wallander, A. Weber, A. Wolfe, A. Wortley, N. Young, M. Zjhra, and many others [estimated 25 families, 1041 genera, and ca. 21,878 species in Lamiales] The goal of this project is to produce a working infraordinal classification of the Lamiales to genus with information on distribution and species richness. All recognized taxa will be clades; adherence to Linnaean ranks is optional. Synonymy is very incomplete (comprehensive synonymy is not a goal of the project, but could be incorporated). Although I anticipate producing a publishable version of this classification at a future date, my near- term goal is to produce a web-accessible version, which will be available to the public and which will be updated regularly through input from systematists familiar with taxa within the Lamiales. For further information on the project and to provide information for future versions, please contact R. Olmstead via email at [email protected], or by regular mail at: Department of Biology, Box 355325, University of Washington, Seattle WA 98195, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • California Wetlands
    VOL. 46, NO.2 FREMONTIA JOURNAL OF THE CALIFORNIA NATIVE PLANT SOCIETY California Wetlands 1 California Native Plant Society CNPS, 2707 K Street, Suite 1; Sacramento, CA 95816-5130 Phone: (916) 447-2677 • Fax: (916) 447-2727 FREMONTIA www.cnps.org • [email protected] VOL. 46, NO. 2, November 2018 Memberships Copyright © 2018 Members receive many benefits, including a subscription toFremontia California Native Plant Society and the CNPS Bulletin. Look for more on inside back cover. ISSN 0092-1793 (print) Mariposa Lily.............................$1,500 Family..............................................$75 ISSN 2572-6870 (online) Benefactor....................................$600 International or library...................$75 Patron............................................$300 Individual................................$45 Gordon Leppig, Editor Plant lover.....................................$100 Student/retired..........................$25 Michael Kauffmann, Editor & Designer Corporate/Organizational 10+ Employees.........................$2,500 4-6 Employees..............................$500 7-10 Employees.........................$1,000 1-3 Employees............................$150 Staff & Contractors Dan Gluesenkamp: Executive Director Elizabeth Kubey: Outreach Coordinator Our mission is to conserve California’s Alfredo Arredondo: Legislative Analyst Sydney Magner: Asst. Vegetation Ecologist native plants and their natural habitats, Christopher Brown: Membership & Sales David Magney: Rare Plant Program Manager and increase understanding,
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Billing Code 4310–55 DEPARTMENT
    This document is scheduled to be published in the Federal Register on 02/26/2014 and available online at http://federalregister.gov/a/2014-04138, and on FDsys.gov Billing Code 4310–55 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Fish and Wildlife Service [FWS-R8-ES-2013-N214] [80221–1113–0000–C2] Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Final Recovery Plan for Tidal Marsh Ecosystems of Northern and Central California AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior. ACTION: Notice of document availability. SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, announce the availability of the final recovery plan for three endangered plants, Cirsium hydrophilum var. hydrophilum (Suisun thistle), Chloropyron molle ssp. molle (soft bird’s-beak), and Suaeda californica (California sea-blite), and two endangered animals, California clapper rail (Rallus longirostris obsoletus) and salt marsh harvest mouse (Reithrodontomys raviventris). The recovery plan includes recovery objectives and criteria, and specific actions necessary to 1 achieve downlisting and delisting from the Federal Lists of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants. ADDRESSES: You may obtain a copy of the recovery plan from our website at http://www.fws.gov/endangered/species/recovery-plans.html. Alternatively, you may contact the Sacramento Fish and Wildlife Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2800 Cottage Way, Suite W-2605, Sacramento, CA 95825 (telephone 916-414-6700). FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jennifer Norris, Field Supervisor, at the above street address or telephone number (see ADDRESSES). SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Background Recovery of endangered or threatened animals and plants to the point where they are again secure, self-sustaining members of their ecosystems is a primary goal of our endangered species program and the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act; 16 U.S.C.
    [Show full text]
  • All Appendices for Informal Biological Evaluation for Mosquito Source
    INFORMAL BIOLOGICAL EVALUATION FOR MOSQUITO SOURCE REDUCTION IN TIDAL HABITATS OF THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA Appendix A Proposed Work Areas for Mosquito Source Reduction by District/County Source: Alameda Mosquito Vector Control District 2013 ALAMEDA COUNTY OVERVIEW Bay Area Mosquito Abatement District Alameda County, California File: App-A_AMVCD_Project-Vicinity_Alameda_1178_2014-0506srb May 2014 Project No. 1178 Figure A-1 Source: Marin/Sonoma Mosquito Vector Control District 2013 MARIN COUNTY OVERVIEW Bay Area Mosquito Abatement District Marin County, California File: App-A_MSMVCD_Project-Vicinity_Marin_1178_2014-0505srb May 2014 Project No. 1178 Figure A-3 Source: Marin/Sonoma Mosquito Vector Control District 2013 MARIN/SONOMA COUNTY OVERVIEW Bay Area Mosquito Abatement District Marin and Sonoma County, California File: App-A_MSMVCD_Project-Vicinity_Marin-Sonoma_1178_2014-0505srb May 2014 Project No. 1178 Figure A-2 Source: Napa Mosquito Vector Control District 2013 NAPA COUNTY OVERVIEW Bay Area Mosquito Abatement District Napa County, California File: App-A_NMVCD_Project-Vicinity_Napa_1178_2014-0506srb May 2014 Project No. 1178 Figure A-4 Source: San Mateo Mosquito Vector Control District 2013 SAN MATEO COUNTY OVERVIEW Bay Area Mosquito Abatement District San Mateo County, California File: App-A_SMMVCD_Project-Vicinity_San-Mateo_1178_2014-0506srb May 2014 Project No. 1178 Figure A-5 Source: Solano Mosquito Vector Control District 2013 SOLANO COUNTY OVERVIEW Bay Area Mosquito Abatement District Solano County, California File: App-A_SMVCD_Project-Vicinity_Solano_1178_2014-0506srb May 2014 Project No. 1178 Figure A-6 INFORMAL BIOLOGICAL EVALUATION FOR MOSQUITO SOURCE REDUCTION IN TIDAL HABITATS OF THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA Appendix B Representative Images of Work Activities Appendix B: Representative Images of Work Activities Photo 1. Ditch excavation by MAD working using hand tools.
    [Show full text]