[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 176 (Monday, September 12, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 56167-56171]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-23266]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

RIN 0648-XA681


Marine Mammals; Pinniped Removal Authority

AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: Notice; request for comments.

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SUMMARY: NMFS received an application under section 120 of the Marine 
Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) from the states of Idaho, Oregon and 
Washington (states) requesting authorization to intentionally take, by 
lethal methods, individually identifiable California sea lions 
(Zalophus californianus) that prey on Pacific salmon and steelhead 
(Onchorhyncus spp.) listed as threatened or endangered under the 
Endangered Species Act (ESA) in the Columbia River in Washington and 
Oregon. This authorization is requested as part of a larger effort to 
protect and recover listed salmonid stocks in the river. Pursuant to 
the MMPA, NMFS has determined that the application contains sufficient 
information to warrant convening a Pinniped-Fishery Interaction Task 
Force (Task Force), which will occur after the close of the public 
comment period. NMFS solicits comments on the application and other 
relevant information related to pinniped predation at Bonneville Dam.

DATES: Comments and information must be received by October 12, 2011.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by NOAA-NMFS-2011-0216, 
by any of the following methods:
    Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public comments via 
the Federal eRulemaking Portal http://www.regulations.gov.
    Mail: Comments on the application should be addressed to: Assistant 
Regional Administrator, Protected Resources Division, NMFS, 1201 NE. 
Lloyd Blvd., Suite 1100, Portland, OR 97232.
    Instructions: All comments received are a part of the public record 
and will generally be posted to http://www.regulations.gov without 
change. All Personal Identifying Information (for example, name, 
address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by the commenter may be publicly 
accessible. Do not submit Confidential Business Information or 
otherwise sensitive or protected information.
    NMFS will accept anonymous comments (enter N/A in the required 
fields, if you wish to remain anonymous). You may submit attachments to 
electronic comments in Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF file formats 
only.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Garth Griffin, (503) 231-2005 or Brent 
Norberg (206) 526-6550 or Shannon Bettridge, (301) 427-8402.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Electronic Access

    Further information is available via the Internet, including the 
states' application, background information on pinniped predation on 
listed salmonids, NMFS' past authorizations of lethal removal at 
Bonneville Dam, descriptions of nonlethal efforts to address the 
predation, NMFS' 2008 Final Environmental Assessment, and 2011 
Supplemental Information Report to the 2008 Final Environmental 
Assessment. The Internet address is: http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/Marine-Mammals/Seals-and-Sea-Lions/Sec-120-Authority.cfm

Statutory Authority

    Section 120 of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361, et seq.) allows the 
Secretary of Commerce, acting through the Assistant Administrator for 
Fisheries (Assistant Administrator), NMFS, to authorize the intentional 
lethal taking of individually identifiable pinnipeds that are having a 
significant negative impact on the decline or recovery of salmonids 
that are listed as threatened or endangered under the ESA. The 
authorization applies only to pinnipeds that are not listed under the 
ESA, or designated as a depleted or strategic stock under the MMPA. 
Pursuant to section 120(b) and (c), a state may request authorization 
to lethally remove pinnipeds, and the Assistant Administrator is 
required to: (1) Review the application to determine whether the 
applicant has produced sufficient evidence to warrant establishing a 
Task Force to address the situation described in the application; (2) 
Establish the Task Force and publish a notice in the Federal Register 
requesting public comment on the application if sufficient evidence has 
been produced; (3) Consider any recommendations made by the Task Force 
in making a determination whether to approve or deny the application; 
and (4) If approved, immediately takes steps to implement the 
intentional lethal taking, which shall be performed by Federal or state 
agencies, or qualified individuals under contract to such agencies.
    The MMPA requires the Task Force be composed of the following: (1) 
NMFS/NOAA staff, (2) scientists who are knowledgeable about the 
pinniped interaction, (3) representatives of affected conservation and 
fishing community organizations, (4) treaty Indian tribes, (5) the 
states, and (6) such other organizations as NMFS deems appropriate. The 
Task Force reviews the application, other background information, the 
factors contained in section 120(d), and public comments and, as 
required by section 120, recommends to NMFS whether to approve or deny 
the application. The Task Force is also required to submit with its 
recommendation a description of the specific pinniped individual or 
individuals; the proposed location, time, and method of such taking; 
criteria for evaluating the success of the action; the duration of the 
intentional lethal taking authority; and a suggestion for non-lethal 
alternatives, if available and practicable, including a recommended 
course of action.

Background

    In December 2006, NMFS received an application co-signed by the 
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Oregon Department of 
Fish and Wildlife, and the Idaho Department of Fish and Game requesting 
authorization to intentionally take, by lethal methods, individually 
identifiable California sea lions in the Columbia River, which are 
having a significant negative impact on the recovery of threatened and 
endangered Pacific salmon and steelhead. After deeming the states' 
application complete, NMFS published a notice in the Federal Register 
seeking public comment on the application and also requested names of 
potential members of the Task Force (see 72 FR 4239, January 30, 2007). 
After the close of the public comment period, NMFS announced the 
formation of the Task Force, which consisted of 18 members (72 FR 
44833, August 9, 2007). The notice also identified a list of questions 
that NMFS considered relevant to its section 120 decision-making 
process. The Task Force completed and submitted its report to NMFS on 
November 5, 2007. Of the 18

[[Page 56168]]

Task Force members, all recommended that non-lethal sea lion deterrence 
measures continue. Seventeen of the eighteen members supported lethal 
removal of California sea lions while one member from the Humane 
Society of the United States (HSUS) opposed the states' application and 
any lethal removal.
    After receiving and reviewing the Task Force recommendations, NMFS 
developed a proposed action and a range of reasonable alternatives and 
evaluated the environmental impacts of the proposed action and 
alternatives in a draft Environmental Assessment (EA) in accordance 
with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The draft EA, 
entitled Reducing the Impact on At-Risk Salmon and Steelhead by 
California Sea Lions in the Area Downstream of Bonneville Dam on the 
Columbia River, Oregon and Washington, was made available for public 
comment for a 30-day comment period (73 FR 3453, January 18, 2008). 
More than 3,500 comments were received, including comments from several 
Task Force member organizations (e.g., states, tribes, HSUS) and others 
including the Marine Mammal Commission and a member of Congress. NMFS 
considered all public comments received on the states' application, the 
draft EA, and other relevant information, and finalized its EA and MMPA 
analyses. NMFS determined that its proposed action of authorizing the 
lethal removal of a limited number of individually identifiable 
California sea lions would not, pursuant to NEPA, result in a 
significant impact on the human environment, and that, pursuant to the 
MMPA, individually identifiable pinnipeds are having a significant 
negative impact on the decline or recovery of at-risk salmonids. 
Following these determinations, NMFS issued letters of authorization to 
Idaho, Oregon and Washington on March 17, 2008, and included specific 
terms and conditions related to the lethal removal program. On March 
24, 2008, NMFS published a notice in the Federal Register informing the 
public of its final decision on the states' application (73 FR 15483, 
March 24, 2008).
    Shortly after NMFS issued the 2008 section 120 LOA, HSUS and others 
filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the District of 
Oregon. Plaintiffs alleged that NMFS' approval of the lethal removal of 
California sea lions violated the MMPA and NEPA. In November 2008, the 
district court issued an order upholding NMFS' approval of the lethal 
removal program and NMFS' evaluation of impacts under NEPA. Plaintiffs 
appealed, and on November 23, 2010, the Ninth Circuit issued a decision 
overturning NMFS' section 120 LOA, but upheld NMFS' analysis and 
finding under NEPA. The Ninth Circuit recognized the significance of 
pinniped predation at Bonneville Dam and noted there are many sources 
of mortality that need to be controlled in order to recover endangered 
and threatened salmonids. The court also recognized that ``sea lion 
predation is a serious and potentially significant problem [at 
Bonneville Dam], and that Congress, in enacting section 120 of the 
MMPA, has authorized NMFS to give priority to ESA-listed salmonid 
populations over MMPA-protected pinnipeds under specific 
circumstances.'' Humane Society of the U.S. v. Locke, 626 F.3d 1040, 
1054 (9th Cir. 2010). However, the court concluded that NMFS' record 
lacked a satisfactory explanation concerning two main points: (1) The 
seemingly inconsistent findings that sea lion predation is significant 
for purposes of the MMPA, but similar or greater levels of take of the 
same salmonid populations by fisheries and hydropower operations on the 
Columbia River is not significant under other authorities (e.g., NEPA); 
and (2) the agency's failure to explain adequately why a California sea 
lion predation rate of greater than 1 percent results in a significant 
negative impact on the decline or recovery of salmonid populations. The 
Ninth Circuit instructed the district court to vacate NMFS' section 120 
decision and remand the decision to NMFS ``to afford the agency the 
opportunity either to articulate a reasoned explanation for its action 
or to adopt a different action with a reasoned explanation that 
supports it'' (Id. at 1053).
    In response to the litigation, the states submitted a letter to 
NMFS dated December 7, 2010 requesting that their LOA be reissued. NMFS 
evaluated the states' request, developed a supplemental information 
report to determine whether there was a need to supplement the 2008 EA 
and Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI), considered a recently 
completed program effectiveness report by the Task Force Final Report 
and Recommendations of the Marine Mammal Protection Act Section 120 
Pinniped-Fishery Interaction Task Force: Columbia River 3-Year Review 
and Evaluation, December 17, 2010, and prepared a comprehensive 
analysis which took into account the Ninth Circuit's concerns and also 
included a more robust explanation of the agency's decision to 
authorize lethal removal of individually identifiable pinnipeds. On May 
12, 2011, NMFS reissued an LOA to the states, relying in large part on 
its administrative record supporting the 2008 LOA and the new analyses 
prepared since the Ninth Circuit decision. See http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/Marine-Mammals/Seals-and-Sea-Lions/Sec-120-Authority.cfm for this LOA.
    One week after NMFS issued the 2011 LOA, HSUS filed a lawsuit in 
the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. HSUS once again 
challenged NMFS' decision alleging, among other things, that the 
agency: (1) Violated the MMPA when it failed to follow section 120's 
procedural requirements, (2) failed to adequately explain the agency's 
inconsistent factual findings that sea lion predation is having a 
significant negative impact on the decline or recovery of listed 
salmonids and that much greater take levels by fisheries and hydropower 
operations are insignificant under NEPA, and (3) violated NEPA when it 
issued a supplemental information report instead of preparing a 
supplemental EA or an EIS. After considering HSUS' filing, particularly 
its allegation that NMFS did not afford the public an opportunity to 
participate in the section 120 process, NMFS, after consulting with the 
states, revoked the 2011 LOA on July 27, 2011. HSUS subsequently filed 
a Notice of Voluntary dismissal and the case was dismissed on August 
15, 2011.
    In order to prepare for the 2012 pinniped-salmonid conflict, 
Oregon, Washington and Idaho submitted a new application for lethal 
removal on August 18, 2011. The states are requesting a new 5-year MMPA 
section 120 predatory California sea lion removal authorization 
identical to the permit NMFS issued to the states on May 12, 2011. 
Under the authorization the States propose to remove no more than 1% of 
the potential biological removal (PBR) limit (defined below) for the 
California sea lion population annually. The states define an 
individually identifiable predatory California sea lions as having 
natural or applied features that allow them to be individually 
distinguished from other California sea lions and have been observed 
eating salmonids at Bonneville Dam, in the ``observation area'' below 
the dam, in the fish ladders, or above the dam, between January 1 and 
May 31 of any year; have been observed at Bonneville Dam on a total of 
five days (consecutive days, days within a single season, or days over 
multiple years) between January 1 and May 31 of any year; and are 
sighted at Bonneville Dam after they have been subjected to active non-
lethal deterrence. The states propose to review

[[Page 56169]]

the lethal removal program on an annual basis and evaluate its 
effectiveness at reducing sea lion predation on salmonids at Bonneville 
Dam. The evaluations will determine whether the states will continue 
the removal program in each subsequent year, and if an extension of the 
authority is needed at the end of the five year period. The expected 
benefit from implementing the authorization would be to reduce the 
recent, unmanageable (using only non-lethal techniques), and growing 
source of ESA listed salmonid mortality. No lethal removal activities 
will be conducted until such time as NMFS makes a final decision on the 
states' pending application.
    The application contains information on (1) pinniped population 
trends, feeding habits, location and timing of the interaction and the 
number of individual animals involved; (2) efforts to non-lethally 
deter the pinnipeds and the relative success of those efforts; (3) the 
extent of the injury or impact caused by pinnipeds on the fishery 
resource; and (4) the extent that pinniped behavior presents a threat 
to public safety, as outlined in section 120(d) of the MMPA.
    The application presents data from the most recent U.S. Pacific 
Marine Mammal Stock Assessment Report indicating that the U.S. stock of 
California sea lions is not listed as ``threatened'' or ``endangered'' 
under the Endangered Species Act, nor as ``depleted'' or ``strategic'' 
under the MMPA. The population has been growing at 5.6% per year and is 
estimated to number a minimum of 238,000 animals. The PBR level (i.e., 
the number of animals that could safely be lost to human caused 
mortality annually without impacting the status of the population) is 
8,511 animals. The states propose to remove no more than 1% of PBR (85) 
of California sea lions annually. The application also summarizes data 
from observations conducted at the dam since 2002 showing that 
California sea lion annual presence at the dam increased from 59 days 
in 2002 to 145 days in 2010 reflecting that over time they have tended 
to arrive earlier and stay later in the year and that attendance by one 
or more sea lions has become more consistent throughout the season. As 
of fall 2010, a total of 264 California sea lions have been uniquely 
identified by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers observers using records 
of applied brands and natural markings. The application reports that 
data from observations conducted in 2011 have yet to become available 
but early indications are that 2011 was an unusual year because winter/
spring river flow conditions appeared to delay salmonid run timing and 
thus affected sea lion attendance and predation at the dam.
    The application reports the results of sea lion food habits 
research (scat and gastrointestinal analysis) conducted at the dam from 
2006 through 2010 confirming that salmonids are the dominant prey of 
California sea lions feeding near the dam. Adult salmonid remains were 
found in over 92% of sea lion scat collected from haul out sites at and 
near the dam. Sixteen gastrointestinal tracts were collected from 
California sea lions sea lions that were taken at the dam under the 
2008 authorization. Except for one tract that was empty, all tracts 
collected contained identifiable salmonid remains.
    As reported in the application, the analysis of observations 
conducted by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from 2002 through 2010 
showed that the minimum expanded estimate of salmonids consumed by 
California sea lions within the observation zone below the dam 
increased from 1,010 to 5,095 fish annually. In spite of fluctuating 
run sizes, and apparently independent of annual run strength, salmonid 
consumption by sea lions has increased steadily. The application points 
out that the observed increase in consumption is masked when the 
estimated consumption in the observation zone is expressed as a 
percentage of run size because when fish passage is high the relative 
percent consumed is smaller even though the number of fish eaten by sea 
lions continues to rise. The application further explains that 
estimated losses of salmonids to sea lions at the dam are minimum 
estimates because they only apply to daylight predation within \1/4\ 
mile of the Bonneville Dam tailrace and forebay structures. Many more 
predation events are known to occur beyond the small area where 
observers on the dam can see and record events accurately. In addition 
to salmonids killed immediately by predation, many fish are also 
injured by predation attempts which may contribute to delayed mortality 
that has not been quantified. Both wild and marked hatchery origin 
salmonids are taken by sea lions.
    Of the 13 threatened and endangered salmonid populations in the 
Columbia River the application identifies eight that are potentially 
impacted by California sea lions in the river and five that are 
particularly vulnerable at Bonneville Dam. Of the species present at 
the dam concurrent with sea lions, one population, upper Columbia River 
spring Chinook, is listed as endangered under the ESA and four 
populations are listed as threatened--Snake River spring/summer 
Chinook, lower Columbia River steelhead, mid-Columbia River steelhead, 
and Snake River steelhead. Marine mammal predation is only one of many 
threats facing these fish populations and the states seek authorization 
to manage predation as part of a larger comprehensive fish recovery 
strategy that is attempting to reduce the impacts across all threats. 
Beyond marine mammal predation the recovery actions include habitat 
improvement, hydroelectric system mitigation, harvest reductions, 
hatchery reforms and bird and fish predation management that are beyond 
the scope of, but referenced in, the application.
    Lastly, the application reports that numbers of California sea 
lions in the Columbia River have been growing since the 1990s and some 
animals have become aggressive and caused injuries to fishers along the 
main stem of the river and its tributaries.
Request for Comments and Other Information
    NMFS solicits public comments on the states' application and any 
additional information that should be considered by the Task Force in 
making its recommendation, or by NMFS in making its determination 
whether to approve or deny the application.
    The Assistant Administrator has considered the states' application 
and determined that it provides sufficient evidence to warrant 
establishing a Task Force. The application describes the means of 
identifying individual pinnipeds, includes a detailed description of 
the problem interactions between pinnipeds and listed salmonids at and 
below Bonneville Dam, and describes the expected benefits of potential 
taking of pinnipeds. The application also documents past nonlethal 
efforts to prevent problem interactions. See http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/Marine-Mammals/Seals-and-Sea-Lions/Sec-120-Authority.cfm.
    NMFS is seeking comments on a number of issues related to the 
pinniped-salmonid conflict at Bonneville Dam. These matters include, 
but are not limited to, the following:
    (1) Any new information on pinnipeds in the action area (e.g., 
population, presence, predation) since 2008;
    (2) Any new information concerning salmonids (e.g., status and 
trends, recovery planning, passage counts,

[[Page 56170]]

predation versus run size, hatchery versus wild components) since 2008;
    (3) Any new information concerning non-lethal deterrence measures 
since 2008;
    (4) The effect of permanent pinniped removals carried out under the 
2008 LOA (i.e., impacts to California sea lion populations or salmonid 
populations);
    (5) Any new information concerning predation on salmonids by other 
species since 2008; and,
    (6) Recommendations made by the Task Force at its October/November 
2010 meeting concerning the effectiveness of the 2008 LOA.
    We are also including, for the public's consideration and comment, 
our proposed interpretation of the MMPA standard ``significant negative 
impact''; a list of the factors we propose to consider in deciding 
whether that standard is met; and our proposed interpretation of what 
is meant by ``individually identifiable pinnipeds'' that are having a 
significant negative impact.
    Pursuant to section 120(b)(1) of the MMPA, NMFS is required to make 
a determination whether individually identifiable pinnipeds are having 
a significant negative impact on the decline or recovery of at-risk 
salmonid fishery stocks. As we explained in 2008, Congress did not 
define the phrase ``individually identifiable pinnipeds which are 
having a significant negative impact.'' Thus, NMFS applied a two-part 
test in which the agency would first determine whether pinnipeds 
collectively are having a significant negative impact on listed 
salmonids and next determine which pinnipeds are significant 
contributors to that impact and therefore, may be authorized for 
removal. We continue to find this two-step test to be reasonable in 
light of the facts and circumstances at Bonneville Dam. We also 
propose, given the lack of guidance from Congress, that the plain 
meaning of the term ``significant negative impact'' as used in section 
120 should be employed. Our view is that in order for California sea 
lions to be having a significant negative impact on the decline or 
recovery of at-risk salmonids, the impact has to be ``meaningful'' and 
not ``insignificant'' or ``meaningless.''
    In determining whether to approve the states' application, we will 
be guided primarily by the factors supplied by Congress in section 
120(d). Congress directed NMFS to consider four categories of 
information to determine whether to approve or deny a states' request: 
(1) Populations trends and feeding habits of the pinnipeds; location, 
timing and manner of the interaction; and number of individual 
pinnipeds involved; (2) past non-lethal deterrence efforts and whether 
the applicant has demonstrated that no feasible and prudent 
alternatives exist and that the applicant has taken all reasonable 
nonlethal steps without success; (3) extent to which the pinnipeds are 
causing undue injury or impact, or imbalance with, other species in the 
ecosystem, including fish populations; and (4) extent to which the 
pinnipeds are exhibiting behavior that presents an ongoing threat to 
public safety (see 16 U.S.C. 1389(d)).
    We interpret this specific, detailed, and narrow inquiry mandated 
by Congress as supplying the factors we should consider when 
determining whether pinniped predation is having a ``significant 
negative impact'' on at-risk salmonids. Moreover, as these factors are 
detailed and specific, and are the only factors Congress mandated, we 
propose to give them great weight. This approach is further supported 
by the structure of section 120 and the context in which Congress 
adopted it. MMPA section 120 applies to a specific and narrow set of 
circumstances--namely, addressing an interspecies conflict where, as in 
this case, one species is healthy, robust, and increasing in size and 
the other is listed as threatened or endangered or is in a state of 
decline. Pinniped predation on at-risk salmonids has been an emerging 
and unchecked source of mortality, a problem that Congress specifically 
addressed when it amended the MMPA in 1994.
    Consistent with our interpretation and view of MMPA section 120, 
and guided by the inquiry Congress required in section 120, we propose 
that the determination of whether pinnipeds are having a ``significant 
negative impact'' on salmonids should also be informed by the following 
factors, a number of which we relied upon in 2008. They include:
    (1) The predation is measurable, growing, and could continue to 
increase if not addressed;
    (2) The level of adult salmonid mortality is sufficiently large to 
have a measurable effect on the numbers of listed adult salmonids 
contributing to the viability of the affected ESUs/DPSs;
    (3) The mortality rate for listed salmonids is comparable to 
mortality rates from other sources that have led to corrective action 
under the ESA;
    (4) Non-lethal deterrence efforts have been unsuccessful at 
reducing the numbers of sea lions or amount of predation;
    (5) The predation rate from California sea lions increases when 
salmonid run sizes decrease;
    (6) The combined effect of California sea lion and Steller sea lion 
predation on at-risk salmonids at Bonneville Dam; and,
    (7) The fact that California sea lion numbers reached their highest 
since 2004, thereby demonstrating that their numbers are as yet 
unpredictable and can easily grow.
    With respect to determining which animals are ``individually 
identifiable pinnipeds,'' NMFS proposes, as it did in 2008, to extend 
any future authorization only to predatory animals with physical 
features distinguishing them from other pinnipeds (e.g., natural 
features, brands, or other applied marks) thus meeting the requirement 
that they be ``individually identifiable.'' To be considered predatory, 
an animal must:
    (1) Have been observed eating salmonids at Bonneville Dam in the 
``observation area'' (i.e., either below or above the dam or in the 
fish ladders) between January 1 and May 31 of any year;
    (2) Have been observed at Bonneville Dam in the observation area on 
a total of any 5 days (consecutive days, days within a single season, 
or days over multiple years) between January 1 and May 31 of any year; 
and
    (3) Be sighted at Bonneville Dam in the observation area after 
having been subjected to active non-lethal deterrence.
    Our view is that an animal meeting all of these criteria has 
learned that the area contains a preferred prey item and is successful 
in pursuing it in that area, is persistent in pursuing that prey item, 
and is not likely to be deterred from pursuing that prey item by non-
lethal means. Given its success at obtaining prey in the area and its 
resistance to non-lethal deterrence efforts, such an animal has shown 
itself to be making a significant contribution to the pinniped 
predation problem at Bonneville Dam and is not a na[iuml]ve animal that 
can be driven away from the area through non-lethal means.
    Finally, we do not propose to adopt the suggestion, made by some 
commenters during our prior process, that we equate determinations 
under NEPA or ESA with determinations under section 120 of the MMPA. 
The ESA and NEPA contain their own standards, definitions, and 
purposes, which results in a different inquiry. NEPA and the ESA have 
broad mandates and require agencies to evaluate the effects of the 
proposed action in combination with other activities that may affect 
the broader environment (NEPA) or threatened and endangered species 
(ESA), respectively. In contrast, section 120 focuses solely

[[Page 56171]]

on pinniped predation on at-risk salmonids. NEPA's inquiry focuses on 
the effects of a proposed action on the quality of the ``human 
environment'', which is defined broadly by the Council on Environmental 
Quality's regulation (see 40 CFR 1508.14). In addition, the term 
``significantly'' has a specific meaning under the NEPA regulations and 
a determination whether an action results in a significant impact on 
the quality of the human environment is informed by a multitude of 
factors (see 40 CFR 1508.27). In contrast, section 120 focuses on a 
very narrow and specific conflict and asks only whether pinniped 
predation is having a significant negative impact on the decline or 
recovery of at-risk salmonids.
    Under the ESA, NMFS must determine whether a proposed action is 
``likely to jeopardize the continued existence'' of a threatened or 
endangered species or ``result in the destruction or adverse 
modification'' of designated critical habitat (16 U.S.C. 1536(a)(2)). 
Under these standards, NMFS has adopted regulations that focus the 
inquiry on the impacts of a proposed action on the species as a whole 
or its designated critical habitat (see 50 CFR 402.02 and 402.14). 
Moreover, as part of its section 7 analysis, NMFS considers the 
``effects of the action,'' which includes the proposed action combined 
with the effects of other activities that are interrelated or 
interdependent with the proposed action, which will be added to the 
environmental baseline. An action may not jeopardize the continued 
existence of a species or result in the destruction or adverse 
modification of critical habitat, even though it has significant 
adverse effects to a listed individual or group of individuals. In sum, 
the ESA's analytical process, like that of NEPA, is well-defined by 
regulation and there is substantial agency guidance on both ESA and 
NEPA implementation, unlike that of MMPA, section 120.

Establishment of the Task Force

    NMFS intends to schedule a Task Force meeting in October 2011 to 
consider the states' application. NMFS will invite member organizations 
from the 2008 Task Force to participate on the 2011 Task Force in order 
to take advantage of their expertise and familiarity with the subject 
matter. NMFS will provide the public with prior notice of the Task 
Force meeting as soon as a date is scheduled.

    Dated: September 6, 2011.
James H. Lecky,
Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries 
Service.
[FR Doc. 2011-23266 Filed 9-9-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P