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J. E. Stover & Associates, Inc <br />December 1, 2015 <br />Page 3 <br />Habitat descriptions and occurrence determinations outlined in Table 1 are based on professional <br />experience, personal communication with experts, and published resources, including Colorado <br />Breeding Bird Atlas,3 Mammals of Colorado,4 CPW habitat mapping,5 U.S. Forest Service (USFS) <br />habitat maps,6 Colorado Herpetofaunal Atlas,7 Amphibians and Reptiles in Colorado,8 and the <br />Colorado Rare Plant Field Guide.9 <br />Physical and Ecological Setting <br />The Bowie No. 1 Mine is an underground coal mine with a permit boundary encompassing 5,035 <br />acres, including a permitted area of surface disturbance of 155.1 acres, within Sections 2, 10, 11, <br />12, 13, 14, 15, 22, 23, 24, and 25, all in Township13 South, Range 92 West of the 6th Principle <br />Meridian, and within Sections 17, 18, 19, 29, 30, 31, and 32, all in Township 13 South, Range 91 <br />West of the 6th Principal Meridian, Delta County, Colorado (Figure 1). <br />The mine is currently in reclamation. Most of the mine's surface infrastructure has been removed, <br />and approximately 59 acres of disturbed land have been backfilled, re -graded, and reseeded. Ten <br />sediment ponds encompassing approximately 1. 17 acres of total surface area remain in the <br />permitted area of surface disturbance (Figure 2). <br />The Bowie No. 1 Mine boundary encompasses a gently -sloping narrow terrace of undifferentiated <br />Holocene and Pleistocene deposits in the valley of the North Fork River at approximately 5,600 feet <br />above mean sea level, rising north into steep hills of the upper Cretaceous Mesaverde formation <br />(sandstone, siltstone, and shale) to nearly 9,145 feet in elevation above the river valley in its north - <br />most reach (Figure 1). The majority of the mine's surface disturbance and above -ground activities <br />occurred on the lower elevation river terrace (load -out facilities) and on benches on the south -facing <br />slopes of the first tier of steep hills north of the North Fork River (portals). The remainder of the <br />mine boundary area harbors the underground workings of Bowie No. 1 Mine. Stevens Gulch Road, <br />a buried aqueduct crossing north to south through the center of the mine permit area, and Johnson <br />Road traverse the west portion of the mine permit area. Numerous jeep roads are present <br />throughout, providing access to private lands and cabins within the permit boundary. State Highway <br />133 bounds a portion of the load -out area on the North Fork River valley floor. <br />The mine permit boundary encompasses a bridge crossing of the North Fork River within the load - <br />out area, and the load -out area lies within a few hundred feet of the North Fork River for an <br />approximately 1 mile reach of the river. The riparian corridor in this reach of river is relatively narrow <br />and confined, compared to upstream and downstream reaches, and is vegetated with mixed stands <br />of native narrowleaf and Rio Grande cottonwoods, willows, and other native and naturalized riparian <br />shrubs. Land use surrounding the load -out area is agricultural and rural -residential, with little native <br />3 Kingery, H.E. (Editor). 1998. Colorado Breeding Bird Atlas. Denver: Co. Bird Atlas Partnership & Co. Division of Wildlife. 636 pp. <br />4 Armstrong, D.M., J.P. Fitzgerald, and C.A. Meany. 2011. Mammals of Colorado. 2nd Ed. Boulder, Colorado: Univ. Press of Co. 620 pp. <br />5 Habitat geospatial data available for download at <br />http://www. arcgis.com/home/group. html?owner-rsacco&title=Colorado%20Parks%20and%20Wiildl ife%20- <br />%20Species%20Activity%20Data#! <br />6 U.S. Forest Service. 2006. Grand Mesa, Uncompahgre, Gunnison National Forests Lynx Habitat Map. Updated February, 2006. <br />7 Colorado Herpetofaunal Atlas. Available online at http://ndis.nrel.colostate.edu/herpatias/coherpatias/ <br />8 Hammerson, G.A. 1999. Amphibians and Reptiles in Colorado: A Colorado Field Guide. 2nd Ed. Denver: University Press of Colorado <br />& CDOW. 494 pp. <br />r <br />9 CRPTC (Colorado Rare Plant Technical Committee). 1999. Colorado Rare Plant Field Guide. Available at <br />hftp://www.cnhp.colostate.edu/rareplants/cover.html. <br />RARE EAR1rh SCIENCE, LLC <br />