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RULE 2 PERMITS <br /> <br />Rule 2 Permits 2.04-65 Revision Date: 6/4/25 <br /> Revision No.: MR-264 <br />Species of birds that occur or are likely to occur in the permit area and the habitat where the species <br />is likely to occur are listed in Table 2.04.11-11, Wildlife Species That Occur Or Are Likely To <br />Occur In The Colowyo Permit Area. All species that were observed during field surveys are noted <br />on the list. <br /> <br />Raptors <br /> <br />Surveys were conducted by VTN personnel during baseline data collection in 1974-1977, and <br />again by Colowyo personnel during the spring and summer of 1980. The most common raptors <br />observed on the permit area from 1974 to the present include Red-tail Hawks, Marsh Hawks, <br />American Kestrels, Great Horned Owls, Golden Eagles, Prairie Falcons, and Turkey Vultures, all <br />of which represent year-round residents with the exception of the turkey vulture. Other raptors that <br />have been observed include the Swainson's Hawk, Cooper's Hawk, Rough Legged Hawk, and <br />Perigrine Falcon. <br /> <br />Raptor nests located during field surveys are recorded Map 15B Sheet 1. Red-trailed hawks are <br />known to have nested on the northern side of the Streeter Draw lease in 1975 and 1978. A pair of <br />Red-tailed Hawks nested on a power pole in Taylor Creek in 1980. One Fledgling was observed. <br />A pair of Cooper's Hawks has been observed at a possible nesting site during 1979 and 1980. The <br />location of two Golden Eagle nesting complexes were obtained from the CPW. The nests are <br />located on sandstone cliffs adjacent to State Highway #13 as shown on the Map 15B Sheet 1. <br /> <br />The area to be mined does not provide suitable nesting habitat for most of the species mentioned. <br />Most of the preferable nesting habitat such as sandstone cliffs, rock outcropping, and trees are <br />found to the north in Axial Basin, to the west along Taylor and Wilson Creeks, and to the east <br />along Good Spring Creek. To date no raptor nests have been found in the area to be mined, <br />although these areas and the reseeded areas provide excellent hunting areas for raptors. <br /> <br />Raptor species that occur or are likely to occur in the permit area are listed in Table 2.04.11-11, <br />Wildlife Species that Occur Or Are Likely To Occur In The Colowyo Permit Area. <br /> <br />Upland Game Birds <br /> <br />Observations of sage grouse have been common in the vicinity of the mine for the last several <br />years; the area is used heavily for nesting and brood rearing from the nesting season through the <br />fall months. No strutting grounds have been found on or near the area to be mined, but information <br />contained in a July 23, 1980 letter rand map from the CPW noted that the general area immediately <br />north of the Colowyo permit area and west of Milk Creek is a very important sage grouse area. <br />The area supports a strutting nesting complex, and there is a large sage grouse brood concentration <br />area north of the complex. During the summer of 1975, brood size averaged 4.3 birds on the mine <br />site. Observations during the summer of 1980 averaged 3.7 birds. <br /> <br />Observations have been made of sage grouse use on the mine plan area through seven winters <br />beginning with the winter of 1974-1975. It has been commonly observed in mountain shrub <br />communities in Northwest Colorado and in other areas that sage grouse move out of these areas in <br />winter due to high snow depths. Observations at Colowyo support these generally accepted sage