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Agenda - Environmental Policy Board - 08/21/2023
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Agenda - Environmental Policy Board - 08/21/2023
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Environmental Policy Board
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08/21/2023
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5/4/23,3:28 PM IPaC:Explore Location resources <br /> 1. "BCC Rangewide" birds are Birds of Conservation Concern (BCC)that are of concern throughout their <br /> range anywhere within the USA(including Hawaii, the Pacific Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin <br /> Islands); <br /> 2. "BCC - BCR" birds are BCCs that are of concern only in particular Bird Conservation Regions (BCRs) in <br /> the continental USA; and <br /> 3. "Non-BCC-Vulnerable" birds are not BCC species in your project area, but appear on your list either <br /> because of the Eagle Act requirements (for eagles) or(for non-eagles) potential susceptibilities in <br /> offshore areas from certain types of development or activities (e.g. offshore energy development or <br /> longline fishing). <br /> Although it is important to try to avoid and minimize impacts to all birds, efforts should be made, in <br /> particular, to avoid and minimize impacts to the birds on this list, especially eagles and BCC species of <br /> rangewide concern. For more information on conservation measures you can implement to help avoid and <br /> minimize migratory bird impacts and requirements for eagles, please see the FAQs for these topics. <br /> Details about birds that are potentially affected by offshore projects <br /> N, 4 <br /> For additional details about the relative occurrence and abundance of both individual bird species and <br /> groups of bird species within your project area off the Atlantic Coast, please visit the Northeast Ocean Data <br /> Portal. The Portal also offers data and information about other taxa besides birds that may be helpful to <br /> you in your project review. Alternately, you may download the bird model results files underlying the portal <br /> maps through the NOAA NCCOS Integrative Statistical Modeling and Predictive Mapping of Marine Bird <br /> Distributions and Abundance on the Atlantic Outer Continental Shelf project webpage. <br /> Bird tracking data can also provide additional details about occurrence and habitat use throughout the <br /> year, including migration. Models relying on survey data may not include this information. For additional <br /> information on marine bird tracking data, see the Diving Bird Study_and the nanotag studies or contact <br /> Caleb Spiegel or Pam Loring. <br /> What if I have eagles on my list? <br /> If your project has the potential to disturb or kill eagles, you may need to obtain a permit to avoid violating <br /> the Eagle Act should such impacts occur. <br /> Proper Interpretation and Use of Your Migratory Bird Report <br /> The migratory bird list generated is not a list of all birds in your project area, only a subset of birds of <br /> priority concern. To learn more about how your list is generated, and see options for identifying what <br /> other birds may be in your project area, please see the FAQ "What does IPaC use to generate the migratory <br /> birds potentially occurring in my specified location". Please be aware this report provides the "probability <br /> of presence" of birds within the 10 km grid cell(s)that overlap your project; not your exact project <br /> footprint. On the graphs provided, please also look carefully at the survey effort (indicated by the black <br /> vertical bar) and for the existence of the "no data" indicator(a red horizontal bar). A high survey effort is <br /> the key component. If the survey effort is high, then the probability of presence score can be viewed as <br /> more dependable. In contrast, a low survey effort bar or no data bar means a lack of data and, therefore, a <br /> lack of certainty about presence of the species.This list is not perfect; it is simply a starting point for <br /> identifying what birds of concern have the potential to be in your project area, when they might be there, <br /> and if they might be breeding(which means nests might be present). The list helps you know what to look <br /> for to confirm presence, and helps guide you in knowing when to implement conservation measures to <br /> avoid or minimize potential impacts from your project activities, should presence be confirmed. To learn <br /> https://ipac.ecosphere.fws.gov/project/E6A7BU61JJEKZCMBS5BY16U2EY/resources#endangered-species 11/13 <br />
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