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TFM. November 1, 2001. Lake Champlain: Record of decision on Sea Lamprey Control Program. Federal Register.
http://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/EPA-IMPACT/2001/November/Day-01/i27431.htm
[Federal Register: November 1, 2001 (Volume 66, Number 212)]
[Notices]
[Page 55197-55199]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr01no01-64]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Record of Decision on Sea Lamprey Control Program in Lake
Champlain
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of the Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: Pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) issues this Record of Decision
(ROD) upon consideration of the Final Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (FSEIS) for the sea lamprey control proposal in Lake
Champlain.
The Service has considered alternatives and evaluated their impacts
for controlling sea lamprey in Lake Champlain as presented in the
FSEIS. We have solicited public and agency comments and considered
these comments in the NEPA process and in making our decision. Based on
that evaluation and review, the Service has decided to select the
Proposed Action alternative for implementation as described in the
FSEIS. The determination was based on a thorough analysis of
environmental, social, economic, and other considerations.
ADDRESSES: Additional copies of this ROD may be requested from Mr. Dave
Tilton, Project Leader, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Lake Champlain
Office, 11 Lincoln St., Essex Junction, Vermont 05452. Alternatively,
copies may be requested electronically at: dave_tilton@fws.gov
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Dave Tilton, Project Leader, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service Lake Champlain Office, 11 Lincoln St., Essex
Junction, Vermont 05452, 802-872-0629, FAX: 802-872-9704.
Background
The intent of this action is to achieve and maintain the greatest
practical reductions in Lake Champlain sea lamprey populations while
avoiding and minimizing significant adverse effects to other fish and
wildlife and public uses in the Lake Champlain basin. Sea lamprey are
primitive marine invaders to Lake Champlain. They are parasitic fish
that feed on the body fluids of other fish resulting in reduced growth
and often the death of host fish. A substantial body of information
collected on Lake Champlain indicates sea lamprey have a profound
negative impact upon the lake's fishery resources and have suppressed
efforts to establish new and historical sportfisheries. In 1990, the
Service, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
(NYSDEC), and Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife (VTDFW),
initiated an 8-year experimental sea lamprey control program for Lake
Champlain. The experimental program treated tributaries and deltas of
Lake Champlain with the chemical lampricides TFM and Bayluscide, which
substantially reduced larval sea lamprey numbers in treated waters. The
program included monitoring and assessment of the effects of sea
lamprey reduction on the characteristics of certain fish populations,
the sport fishery, and the area's growth and economy. A set of 30
evaluation standards was established. Overall, the experimental sea
lamprey control program met or exceeded the majority of the standards
demonstrating a successful reduction in sea lamprey population. In
addition to this evaluation, the cooperating agencies assessed the
effects of the program on nontarget organisms.
Two rounds of treatments were planned for each significantly
infested stream and delta. From 1990 through 1996, 24 TFM treatments
were conducted on 14 Lake Champlain tributaries, and 9 Bayluscide (5
percent granular) treatments were conducted on 5 deltas. A cumulative
total of approximately 141 stream miles and 1,220 delta acres were
treated. In summary, trap catches of spawning-phase sea lamprey
declined by 80 to 90 percent; nest counts were reduced by 57 percent.
Sixteen of twenty-two TFM treatments reduced ammocoetes at index
stations to less than 10 percent of pre-treatment levels. Eight of the
nine Bayluscide treatments resulted in mean mortality rates over 85
percent among caged ammocoetes. Relatively small numbers of nontarget
amphibian and fish species were killed. Adverse effects on nontarget
species were higher for Bayluscide treatments than TFM. Native mussels,
snails, and some other macroinvertebrates were significantly affected
after the 1991 Bayluscide treatments of the Ausable and Little Ausable
deltas in New York. However, they recovered to pre-treatment levels
within 4 years. American brook lamprey also experienced substantial
treatment-related mortality. Yet, the finding of American brook lamprey
in second-round treatments in each stream where they were negatively
affected during the first round, suggested survival or immigration was
adequate to maintain their presence in the streams. Wounding rates on
lake trout and landlocked Atlantic salmon were reduced in the main lake
basin, and catches of both species increased. A significant increase in
survival of 3-to 4-year lake trout was noted; survival of older fish
improved but did not change significantly. Returns of Atlantic salmon
to tributaries increased significantly after treatment. Changes in
wounding rates on brown and rainbow trout could not be evaluated, but
angler catches increased since 1990. Catch per unit effort of rainbow
smelt, the major forage species for salmonids, decreased significantly
at one of two sampling stations in the main lake basin and in Malletts
Bay, but not at other locations; length-at-age also decreased at most
sites. Evaluation of angler responses to the program indicated a
favorable 3.5:1 economic benefit:cost ratio.
``A Comprehensive Evaluation of an Eight Year Program of Sea
Lamprey Control in Lake Champlain'' provides a detailed description of
the results of the project. It is available on the Service web-site at,
www.fws.gov/r5lcfwro/lamprey/lamprey.html, or from the contact for
further information listed above.
Based on the results of the experimental program, the Lake
Champlain Fish and Wildlife Management Cooperative comprised of the
Service, the NYSDEC, and the VTDFW concluded that a long-term sea
lamprey control program was warranted.
The public participation process on the proposal began in 1999. The
Notice of Intent to prepare the Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (SEIS) was published in the November 16, 1999, Federal
Register. The Notice of Availability of the Draft Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement (DSEIS) was published on March 15, 2001.
The comment period on the DSEIS ended on April 30, 2001. The Notice of
Availability of the FSEIS appeared in the September 6, 2001, Federal
Register. Four scoping meetings and two public meetings on the FSEIS
were held, divided equally between Vermont and New York.
The Selected Alternative
The selected alternative is the proposed action as described in the
FSEIS. This alternative implements a long-term sea lamprey control
program based on the principals of integrated
[[Page 55198]]
pest management. The selected alternative will implement a tributary
specific approach, in which all viable sea lamprey control techniques
will be screened for use in each infested stream system.
This action expands sea lamprey control beyond the experimental
program implemented in 1990, to include several untreated streams in
New York, Vermont, and Quebec, Canada, in addition to those waters
previously treated in the experimental program. Under this approach,
many of the infested streams will be treated with lampricides, but
total reliance on lampricides will be avoided through the use of
barriers and/or traps where feasible. Sea lamprey producing streams
currently designated for potential control include: The Great Chazy
River including Bullis Brook, the Saranac, Salmon, Little Ausable, and
Ausable River including Dry Mill Brook, the Bouquet River, Beaver and
Mullen Brook, Putnam Creek, Mt. Hope and Greenland Brook, Lewis Creek,
the Laplatte River, the Winooski River including Sunderland Brook,
Mallets Creek including Indian Brook, Trout Brook, Stone Bridge Brook,
the Missisquoi River, Youngman Brook, and Pike River including Morpion
Stream.
Tentatively, this new sea Lamprey control effort is scheduled to
begin in the fall of 2001, at Lewis Creek, Vermont. All control efforts
will comply with applicable Vermont and New York permit requirements
and be conducted in conformance with conditions designated through the
permit process.
The selected alternative will defer lampricide treatment of the
Poultney and Hubbardton Rivers for 5 years to fully assess potential
alternatives to lampricides and the effects of the initiated portion of
the sea lamprey control program on wounding rates. If the wounding rate
objectives are not attained and feasible alternative control methods
are not available, lampricide treatments will be implemented for both
tributaries following the 5-year period.
Other Alternatives Considered
Three alternatives including the selected alternative, were
considered in the FSEIS.
Alternative 2. This alternative would maintain reduced sea lamprey
wounding rates attained during the experimental control program. This
alternative and its methodologies would rely on the use of lampricides
for maintaining reduced sea lamprey numbers, and restrict the program
primarily to those rivers and deltas that were treated in the
experimental program. This alternative ignores additional control
techniques and locations included in the selected alternative that may
offer nonchemical control methods. Under this alternative TFM and
Bayluscide treatments would be conducted on sea lamprey infested
streams and deltas. Lampricide treatment of each stream or delta would
be scheduled according to sea lamprey larval transformation rates, or
in most cases every fourth year.
Alternative 3. This alternative would abandon sea lamprey control
efforts as a fisheries management tool for Lake Champlain. The most
significant impact of this alternative is that it would never achieve
the projected harvest, recreational and economic benefits which are
possible with effective control of sea lamprey. This alternative would
eliminate any adverse impacts associated with the selected alternative
including preventing nontarget mortality on aquatic species associated
with the use of lampricides.
Mitigation of Impacts
As discussed in the FSEIS, the selected alternative includes a
variety of measures to minimize the adverse environmental, social and
economic impacts. These measures include use of lampricide treatments
and nonchemical control methods such as barriers and trapping.
Mitigation measures include, but are not limited to, issuing advisories
against water use until the lampricide plume has dissipated (24 hours
after the concentration of TFM has decreased below 20 ppb, or after
pre-established time intervals allowing for thorough dissipation of
Bayluscide have expired), providing commercially bottled drinking water
to households that withdraw water for drinking and other household
purposes, applying lampricides in waters inhabited by endangered and
threatened species at concentrations shown not to impact such species,
regular monitoring of lampricide concentrations during applications and
prompt adjustment of rates if necessary to minimize nontarget fish
mortalities.
Additional mitigation measures will be applied through the permit
conditions issued by the NYSDEC, the Vermont Department ofEnvironmental
Consevation (VTDEC), the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources (VTANR),
the VTDFW , Adirondack Park Agency (APA), Quebec Ministry of
Environment and other applicable Canadian regulatory agencies.
Findings and Decisions
Having reviewed and considered the FSEIS for sea lamprey control in
Lake Champlain and the public comments thereon, the Service finds as
follows:
(1) The requirements of NEPA and implementing the Council on
Environmental Quality regulations have been satisfied.
(2) Statutory authority for the Service's funding of and
participation in the project exists under the Federal Aid in Sport Fish
Restoration Act of August 9, 1950 (64 Stat. 430), as amended (16 U.S.C.
777-777l), the Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act, 16 U.S.C. 661-666
and the Lake Champlain Special Designation Act of 1990, P.L. 101-596.
(3) Consistent with social, economic and environmental
considerations from among the reasonable alternatives thereto, the
selected alternative is in the best interest for the resource and
citizens of the States of New York and Vermont and one that minimizes
or avoids adverse effects to the maximum extent practicable.
(4) Consistent with the environmental analysis provided in the
FSEIS, adverse environmental effects will be minimized or avoided by
incorporating as conditions the mitigation measures identified in the
proposed action in the FSEIS and its supporting appendices.
(5) Consistent with the Purpose and Need Statement of the FSEIS,
the Service establishes the following as the program objectives for the
selective alternative: Achieve and maintain lamprey wounding rates at
or below 25 wounds per lake trout, ideally 10 wounds per 100 lake
trout; 15 wounds per 100 landlocked salmon, ideally 5 wounds per 100
landlocked salmon, and 2 wounds per 100 walleye, ideally less than 1
wound per 100 walleye. Attain wounding rate objectives within 5 years
of full implementation of the selected alterative.
The decision to implement this alternative is subject to the
following conditions:
a. All applicable regulatory requirements and approvals will be
satisfied or obtained.
b. All applicable State and Provincial permit conditions are hereby
adopted as part of this finding and will be met.
c. All studies and other conditions contained in the FSEIS proposed
action alternative are adopted by the Service.
d. Conditions of b and c above will be incorporated into the NYSDEC
and VTDFW Federal Aid grant agreement for this project.
This Record of Decision will serve as the written facts and
conclusions relied on in reaching this decision. This Record of
Decision was approved by the Acting Regional Director of the Service on
October 9, 2001.
[[Page 55199]]
Dated: October 9, 2001.
Richard O. Bennett,
Acting Regional Director, Region 5, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 01-27431 Filed 10-31-01; 8:45 am]
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