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GENERAL39413
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GENERAL39413
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Last modified
8/24/2016 7:58:52 PM
Creation date
11/23/2007 10:09:37 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1980007
IBM Index Class Name
General Documents
Doc Name
Dec Document for Federal Lease COC-56447
Permit Index Doc Type
Other Permits
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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Vegetation • <br />The vegetation of the application lands is comprised of scrub oak and <br />sagebrush with an understory of grasses. There are stands of aspen and <br />Engelmann spruce-Douglas fir on the upper north facing slopes. The grasses <br />and mountain shrubs that have been identified are western wheatgrass, <br />Indian ricegrass, oak brush, serviceberry, chokecherry, sagebrush, mountain <br />brome and junegrass. <br />There is a unique riparian zone within the Box Canyon drainage. A <br />Cambel oak, hawthorne and chokecherry community is present for the first <br />1/3 mile. A small grove of narrow-leaf cottonwood follows far <br />approximately 100 feet. From this point, for the length of the canyon, the <br />diversity of plant life dramatically increases. Amicro-climate exists <br />within the upper two-thirds of the canyon. This is a result of the <br />canyon's narrowness and aspect which traps in the cool air producing a <br />diversity of plant species which include: Narrow-leaf cottonwood, box <br />elder, Douglas fir, aspen. Gambel oak, chokecherry, serviceberry, Rocky <br />mountain maple, mountain ash, redstem ceanothus, snowberry, sticky currant, <br />mountain lover, western thimbleberry, Rudbeckia spp., wild raspberry, cow <br />parsnip, Oregon grape, false Solomon's seal, bluntseed sweetroot, meadow <br />rue, lupine, violet, bedstraw, columbine, Fremont geranium, blue gentian, <br />bracken fern, Kentucky bluegrass, western wheatgrass, and brome grass. <br />Land Use <br />The topography is characterized as steep north facing slopes on the + •~ <br />southeastern margin of Grand Wesa. The application lands are between the <br />North Fork of the Gunnison P.iver and Minnesota Creek drainages at <br />elevations ranging from 6,100 feet to 8,500 feet above sea level. ': he <br />application lands support wildlife use, dispersed recreation and livestock <br />grazing. _ <br />The Forest Service Amended LRMP prescription designates the tract as <br />6B and 9A. Prescription 6B emphasizes livestock grazing and may provide <br />recreation opportunities for semi-primitive non-motorized, semi-primitive <br />motorized and roaded natural settings. Prescription 9A emphasizes <br />management of all the components of the aquatic riparian ecosystem. <br />The area is generall•~ open to off road motorized use as identified on <br />the "Gunnison Area Basin" Forest map. <br />On the National Forest, the Dry Fork Cattle and Horse Allotment <br />overlays the proposed lease tract and is grazed by 507 permitted cattle <br />from June 16 to October 1. Scockponds are located throughout the tract and <br />could possibly be used as a source for drilling water. The BLM surface is <br />within Livestock Allotment =~i17: the allotment permits 900 sheep during <br />the summer months. <br />There are two rights-of-way located on the application lands managed <br />by the BLM, one power line (COC-3b6b6) and Colorado State Highway 133 <br />(C-31589), see Map L. These rights-of-way cross the northeastern portion. ~~ <br />of the"proposed lease tract. After [he application of Che Cca1 ~ <br /> <br />11 <br />
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