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2021-09-03_PERMIT FILE - C1981019A (8)
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2021-09-03_PERMIT FILE - C1981019A (8)
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Last modified
5/10/2023 2:22:44 PM
Creation date
4/27/2022 2:26:16 PM
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Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981019A
IBM Index Class Name
Permit File
Doc Date
9/3/2021
Doc Name
Permits
Section_Exhibit Name
Volume 15 Rule 2
Media Type
D
Archive
Yes
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RULE 2 PERMITS <br /> shrubs per acre). The shrub lifeform accounts for 99 percent(2,304 plants per acre) and trees account for <br /> 1 percent(11 plants per acre)of the total(Table 2.04.10-48). <br /> The reference area is located in an area that exhibits "die-off' of sagebrush. It is anticipated that sage <br /> reinvasion will occur over the next several years. <br /> In the bottomland reference area, average ground cover was 64.2 percent, with 0.5 percent rock, 31.65 <br /> percent litter, and 3.65 percent bare ground exposure. Dominant plant species and their ground cover <br /> percentage included: cheatgrass (27.3 percent), western wheatgrass (9.6 percent), Sandberg bluegrass <br /> (Poa secunda) (7.45 percent), basin wildrye (Elymus cinereus) (4.55 percent), and thickspike wheatgrass <br /> (3.15 percent). Of the total plant cover, 56 percent (35.8 percent average cover) was comprised of <br /> perennial plants (excluding noxious weeds). Annual species contributed 44 percent and noxious weeds <br /> contributed 0.0 percent of the composition. Four perennial species contributed at least 3 percent relative <br /> cover or composition,with all four of those species being grasses(Table 2.04.10-46). <br /> The average herbaceous production in the bottomland reference area was 1,696 pounds per acre, oven-dry <br /> weight, with 66 percent(1,114 pounds per acre) due to perennials (grasses contributing 1,113 pounds per <br /> acre and forbs providing 1 pound per acre) and 34 percent(582 pounds per acre) due to annuals (grasses <br /> contributing 578 pounds per acre and forbs contributing 5 pounds per acre). Noxious weeds were not <br /> found in any of the sampling quadrats in the bottomland community, but were observed in the area(Table <br /> 2.04.10-49). <br /> Woody plant density in the bottomland reference area was 540 plants per acre with dominance by rubber <br /> rabbitbrush (221 plants per acre) and basin big sagebrush (198 plants per acre). The shrub lifeform <br /> accounted for 100 percent of the total (Table 2.04.10-50). <br /> The comparison of the calculated t-statistic(t*) for the bottomland community baseline study area and the <br /> bottomland reference area with the respective tabular t values indicates that in each case t* is less than t. <br /> So, it can be concluded that the total vegetation ground cover and production for the bottomland <br /> community baseline study area is comparable (equal) to the values obtained from the bottomland <br /> reference area(Table 2.04.10-38). <br /> Grassland - The grassland community baseline study area occupies 816 acres (Map 4). It is <br /> predominately an early-seral community found in the flat uplands where natural and prescribed burns <br /> have removed the sagebrush or mountain shrub overstory vegetation and the usually sub-dominant <br /> grasses have flourished. Small patches of the grassland community can be found along high elevation <br /> ridges and summit where thin soils and high winds have inhibited shrub densities. The grassland <br /> reference site is located in the northern uplands on the bench between Collom and Morgan Creeks and <br /> occupies 27.7 acres (Map 4). It appears that the reference area was subject to a prescribed burn <br /> approximately 1 to 2 decades prior to sampling and re-invasion of sagebrush has been generally slow <br /> compared with burned areas at higher elevations. The reference area was selected because of its easy <br /> access, low probability of future disturbance, and representative grassland characteristics. It is unlikely to <br /> see extensive sagebrush re-invasion in the immediate future. <br /> A total of 93 plant species were observed within the grassland community baseline study area while the <br /> reference area exhibited 26 taxa. No sensitive species were observed within the study area. Noxious <br /> weeds, Canada thistle, musk thistle, whitetop, and bindweed (Convolvulus arvensis)were observed in the <br /> study area(Table 2.04.10-34). <br /> The average cover within the grassland community baseline study area was 58.19 percent, with 1.37 <br /> percent rock, 25.83 percent litter, and 14.62 percent bare ground exposure. Dominant plant species and <br /> Collom—Rule 2, Page 51 Revision Date: 12/20/19 <br /> Revision No.: TR-135 <br />
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