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Last modified
8/16/2009 2:51:23 PM
Creation date
10/4/2006 6:39:48 AM
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Board Meetings
Board Meeting Date
5/24/2004
Description
WSP Section - Platte River Recovery Implementation Program Update. Draft Environmental Impact Statement and National Academy of Science Update.
Board Meetings - Doc Type
Memo
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<br />. <br /> <br />Endangered and Threatened Species of the Platte River <br /> <br />Principal Findings of the Committee <br /> <br />1, Do current central Platte habitat conditions affect the likelihood of survival of the whooping <br />crane? Do they limit [adversely affect) its recovery? <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />The committee concluded that, given available knowledge, current central Platte habitat <br />conditions adversely affect the likelihood of survival of the whooping crane, but to an unknown <br />degree, The Platte River is important to whooping cranes: about 7% of the total whooping crane <br />population stop on the central Platte River in anyone year, and many, if not all, cranes stop over <br />on the central Platte at some point in their lifetimes. Population viability analyses show that if <br />mortality were to increase by only 3%, the general population would likely become unstable, <br />Thus, ifthe cranes using the Platte River were eliminated, population-wide effects would be <br />likely, Resources acquired by whooping cranes during migratory stopovers contribute <br />substantially to meeting nutrient needs and probably to ensuring survival and reproductive <br />success, Because 70-80% of crane mortality occurs during migration, and because the Platte <br />River is in a central location for the birds' migration, the river takes on considerable importance. <br />The corrunittee concluded that current habitat conditions depend on river management in the <br />central Platte River, but the population also depends on events in other areas along the migratory <br />corridor, If habitat conditions on the central Platte River-that is, the physical circumstances <br />and food resources required by cranes-dec1ine substantially, recovery could be slowed or <br />reversed. The Platte River is a consistent source of relatively well-watered habitat for whooping <br />cranes, with its water source in distant mountain watersheds that are not subject to drought cycles <br />that are as severe as those of the Northern Plains. There are no equally useful habitats for <br />whooping cranes nearby: the Rainwater Basin dries completely about once a decade, and the <br />Sandhills are inconsistent as crane habitat, while the Niobrara and other local streams are subject <br />to the same variability as the surrounding plains, Future climatic changes may exacerbate <br />conflicts between habitat availability and management and human land use. If the quality or <br />quantity of other important habitats becomes less available to whooping cranes, the importance <br />of the central Platte River could increase. <br /> <br />2. Is the current designation of central Platte River habitat as "critical habitat" for the <br />whooping crane supported by the existing science? <br /> <br />An estimated 7% of the wild, migratory whooping crane population now uses the central <br />Platte River on an annual basis and many, if not all, cranes stopover on the central Platte at some <br />point in their lifetimes. The proportion of whooping cranes that use the central Platte River and <br />the amount of time that they use it are increasing (with expected inter-annual variation). The <br />designation of central Platte River migratory stopover habitat as critical to the species is <br />therefore supported because the birds have specific requirements for roosting areas that include <br />open grassy or sandy areas with few trees, separation from predators by water, and proximity to <br />foraging areas such as wetlands or agricultural areas, The Platte River critical habitat area is the <br />only area in Nebraska that satisfies these needs on a consistent basis, However, some habitats <br />designated as critical in 1978 appear to be largely unused by whooping cranes in recent years, <br />and the birds are using adjacent habitats that are not so designated. <br />Habitat selection (to the extent that it can be measured) on multiple geographic scales <br />strongly suggests that Nebraska provides important habitat for whooping cranes during their <br /> <br />6 <br />
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