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<br />. <br /> <br />SUMMARY <br /> <br />The North Platte River and the South Platte River rise in the Rocky Mountains of <br />Colorado and flow through Wyoming and Colorado, respectively, to join in western Nebraska to <br />form the Platte River, which continues eastward to its confluence with the Missouri River. The <br />central Platte River and the lower Platte River are the focus of this report. The central Platte <br />River (as defined in this report) includes the reach from Lexington to Columbus, Nebraska, and <br />the lower Platte River is the segment from Columbus to the confluence with the Missouri River <br />(Figure S-l), <br />A portion of the Platte River corridor is within the North American Central Flyway and <br />provides habitat for migratory and breeding birds, including three endangered or threatened <br />species: the whooping crane (Grus americana), the northern Oreat Plains population ofthe <br />piping plover (Charadrius melodus), and the interior least tern (Sterna antillarum athalassos), <br />Most of the interest related to habitat areas for these listed birds extends from Lexington to <br />Chapman (Figure Sol), The broad, shallow waters of the lower Platte River provide important <br />habitat for the endangered pallid sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus albus), <br />Continentwide conditions are responsible for the declines in populations of those four <br />species that resulted in their listings under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) or, in the case of <br />the cranes, prior legislation. The decline in whooping crane populations began many years ago <br />with overhunting and widespread habitat destruction. Whooping cranes, the rarest species of . <br />crane in the world, were federally listed as endangered in 1967 under the Endangered Species <br />Preservation Act, Critical habitat for the whooping crane was designated in 1978, Only about <br />185 wild birds remain, and another 118 are in captivity, <br />The northern Great Plains population of the piping plover was federally listed as <br />threatened in 1986. Critical habitat for the piping plover was designated in 2002, The <br />population on the Platte River was estimated in 2001 at about 85 nesting pairs, The number and <br />extent of suitable nesting sites have declined with changes in magnitudes and frequency of river <br />flows, flooding from local runoff, changes in vegetation, and human interference during nesting, <br />Interior least terns were federally listed as endangered in 1985. Observations of the <br />interior least tern are rare in the central Platte River. The estimated total number of birds in the <br />lower Platte River area is now less than 500, Their population decline results from the loss of <br />open sandy areas in and along rivers, a byproduct of inundation by reservoirs, channelization, <br />large-scale changes in flow regimes, and replacement of open areas with woodlands, sand and <br />gravel mines, housing, and roadways. <br />The pallid sturgeon was federally listed as endangered in 1990 in the lower Platte River. <br />Populations of pallid sturgeon have declined throughout its range; 500 observations per year in <br />the 1960s declined to about seven per year in the 1980s, Pallid sturgeon seem to prefer warm, <br />turbid waters with annually variable flows and firm, sandy channel bottoms; however, extensive <br />damming has disrupted fish passage and resulted in cooler stream flows, less turbid waters, and <br />inconsistent flow regimes. Commercial harvesting, now illegal, also contributed to the decline of <br />the pallid sturgeon. <br />The Platte River delivers water, mostly from precipitation in the Rocky Mountains, to an <br />extensive water-control system for irrigated agriculture and urban water in all three states. This <br /> <br />1 <br />