71 FR 30 pgs. 7794-7796 - Notice of Availability of the Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Environmental Assessment for the Cedar Island National Wildlife Refuge in Carteret County, NC
Type: NOTICEVolume: 71Number: 30Pages: 7794 - 7796
FR document: [FR Doc. 06-1347 Filed 2-13-06; 8:45 am]
Agency: Interior Department
Sub Agency: Fish and Wildlife Service
Official PDF Version: PDF Version
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Notice of Availability of the Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Environmental Assessment for the Cedar Island National Wildlife Refuge in Carteret County, NC
AGENCY:
Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION:
Notice of availability.
SUMMARY:
This notice announces that a Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan andEnvironmental Assessment for the Cedar Island National Wildlife Refuge are availablefor review and comment. The National Wildlife System Administration Act of 1966, asamended by the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997, requires theService to develop a comprehensive conservation plan for each national wildlife refuge.The purpose in developing a comprehensive conservation plan is to provide refugemanagers with a 15-year strategy for achieving refuge purposes and contributing towardthe mission of the National Wildlife Refuge System, consistent with sound principles offish and wildlife management, conservation, legal mandates, and Service policies. Inaddition to outlining broad management direction on conserving wildlife and theirhabitats, plans identify wildlife-dependent recreational opportunities available to thepublic, including opportunities for hunting, fishing, wildlife observation, wildlifephotography, and environmental education and interpretation.
DATES:
Individuals wishing to comment on the Draft Comprehensive ConservationPlan and Environmental Assessment for Cedar Island National Wildlife Refuge should do so no later than March 16, 2006.Public comments were requested, considered, and incorporatedthroughout the planning process in numerous ways. Public outreach has includedscoping meetings, a review of the biological program, an ecosystem planning newsletter,and Federal Register notices.
ADDRESSES:
Requests for copies of the Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan andEnvironmental Assessment should be addressed to Bruce Freske, Refuge Manager,Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge, 38 Mattamuskeet Road, Swan Quarter, NorthCarolina 27885; Telephone: 252/926-4021; Fax: 252/926-1743. Comments on the draftmay be submitted to the above address or via electronic mail to: bruce_freske@fws.gov. Our practice is to make comments, including names and home addresses of respondents,available for public review during regular business hours. Individual respondents mayrequest that we withhold their home addresses from the record, which we will honor tothe extent allowed by law.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The Service analyzed three alternatives formanaging the refuge and chose Alternative 2 as the preferred alternative.
Proposed goals for the refuge include:
Wildlife, Fish, and Plant Populations. Conserve, protect, and maintain healthy and viable populations of migratory birds, wildlife, fish, and plants, including Federal and State threatened, endangered, and trust species.
Habitat. Protect and enhance diverse habitats, rare plant assemblages, and nursery areas associated with the Pamlico-Core Sounds and the mid-Atlantic coastal plain.
Public use. Develop programs and facilities to increase public use opportunities, including hunting, fishing, wildlife observation, wildlife photography, and environmental education and interpretation.
Resource Protection. Protect refuge resources by limiting impacts of human development and activity on and around Cedar Island National Wildlife Refuge.
Administration. Provide adequate funding and staffing to accomplish refuge goals and objectives.
Also available for review are compatibility determinations for recreational hunting, fishing, wildlife observation, wildlife photography, and environmental education and interpretation.
Alternatives
Alternative 1 proposes to maintain the status quo. The staff would manage marshes and pine forests with prescribed burns conducted by employees from other refugees according to the Fire Management Plan. The refuge would employ a single maintenance worker stationed on the refuge to maintain the buildings and grounds, clean up dumpsites, and pick up litter. Staff from other refuges would survey waterfowl from the air on a routine basis. The refuge would conduct no other surveys of wildlife or habitats. The refuge would allow all six priority public use activities: waterfowl hunting, fishing, wildlife observation, wildlife photography, and environmental education and interpretation. The staff would not conduct environmental education and interpretation programs, but would allow others to conduct programs on the refuge. The Service would manage the refuge from Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge.
Alternative 2, the preferred alternative, proposes minimum program increases. The refuge would document the presence of priority wildlife species, but would not monitorhabitat. Staff would survey waterfowl from the air on a routine basis. The refuge wouldcontinue to allow the six priority public use activities, but would have the capacity toincrease the number of opportunities. The staff would conduct environmental educationprograms once a month. An interpretive and observation trail with a brochure and aphoto blind would be established. The staff would also control dominant pest plants andanimals. There would be four staff members stationed at the Cedar Island NationalWildlife Refuge.
Alternative 3 proposes moderate program increases. The refuge would document thepresence of priority wildlife species and mammals and monitor fire-dependent habitats.The staff would monitor vegetation in the marshes and pine forests before and afterprescribed burns conducted by staff from other refuges according to the Fire ManagementPlan. Staff from the refuge would survey waterfowl from the air and the ground on aroutine basis. The refuge would continue to allow the six priority public use activities,but would have the capacity to increase the number of opportunities. The staff wouldconduct environmental education and interpretation programs once a month. Aninterpretive trail with brochure and photo blind would be established. The staff wouldalso monitor pest plants and animals and control them according to an integrated PestManagement Plan. There would be eight staff members stationed at the Cedar IslandNational Wildlife Refuge.
Actions Common to All Alternatives
All three alternatives share the following concepts and techniques for achieving the goalsof the refuge:
• Cooperating with local, State, and Federal agencies, and non-governmentalorganizations to administer refuge programs;
• Utilizing volunteers to execute the public use, biological, and maintenanceprograms on the refuge;
• Monitoring populations of waterfowl, shorebirds, and wading birds, andvegetation in the refuge impoundments;
• Maintaining vegetation in the marsh with prescribed fire; and
• Encouraging scientific research on the refuge.
Cedar Island National Wildlife Refuge, in east-central North Carolina, consists of 14,480acres in fee simple ownership. On the refuge, 11,000 acres are brackish marsh, 1,500acres are longleaf pine savanna, 150 acres are brackish shrub, 125 acres are pond pinewoodland, 100 acres are bay forests, 100 acres are low pocosin, and 50 acres are cypress-gum swamp. These habitats support a variety of wildlife species, including waterfowl,shorebirds, wading birds, marsh birds, and neotropical migratory songbirds.
The refuge hosts more than thirty thousand visitors annually who participate in hunting,fishing, wildlife observation, wildlife photography, and environmental education and interpretation.
Authority:
This notice is published under the authority of the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement act of 1997, Public Law 105-57.
Dated: September 7, 2005.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director.
Editorial Note:
This document was received at the Office of the Federal Register on February 9, 2006.
[FR Doc. 06-1347 Filed 2-13-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-M