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2008-05-28_REVISION - C1981019 (2)
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2008-05-28_REVISION - C1981019 (2)
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Last modified
8/24/2016 3:32:07 PM
Creation date
5/29/2008 1:36:58 PM
Metadata
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Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
C1981019
IBM Index Class Name
REVISION
Doc Date
5/28/2008
Doc Name
27 May 2008 TR-72 Responses and Response Letter (Rule 2 Reclamation Plan 2.05.4)
From
Colowyo Coal Company
To
DRMS
Type & Sequence
TR72
Email Name
JRS
Media Type
D
Archive
No
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This additional level of complexity should not be problematic for maintaining an overall topsoil <br />balance. It will simply add an additional layer of "bookkeeping" (Section 12 of the Annual <br />Report) beyond that which has already occurred at Colowyo over the past three decades. <br />Revegetation Plan <br />Following the retopsoiling of an area, any necessary fertilization, surface preparation, berm <br />development, construction of contour furrows, and seeding of the reclamation will take place. <br />The reclamation seed mixture for areas targeting grassland (grazingland land use and erosion <br />control), as shown in Table 2.05-7, Reclamation Seed Mixture, contains sufficient diversity <br />for ecological stability. The seed mixture contains a variety of grasses, forbs and shrub <br />species well adapted to the soil and moisture conditions found at Colowyo. The diverse seed <br />mixture is capable of self-selection for each reclaimed micro-habitat encountered in the <br />reclaimed areas. The diverse seed mixture is required to ensure quick erosion control for the <br />first few years of reclamation as well as obtaining the desired post-mining vegetative <br />community with the same seasonal variety and lifeform of the pre-mined area. <br />The species and seeding rates indicated on this "grassland" mix resulted from in-depth <br />analyses of past mixes and the resulting emergence and dominance within revegetated areas. <br />A total of eleven different measurement events on Colowyo reclamation coupled with a <br />performance evaluation for each taxon in the 2002 mix resulted in development of the mix <br />indicated on Table 2.05-7 as well as Table 2.05-9. Examples of changes resulting from this <br />analysis include: elimination of streambank wheatgrass (less palatable and redundant with <br />thickspike), elimination of big bluegrass from the grassland mix for lack of performance, <br />elimination of Sainfoin from both mixes for lack of performance, and substantial increases in <br />the amount of sagebrush seed in both grassland and especially sagebrush steppe targeted <br />mixes. These changes, including the planted amounts, have resulted in an increase in the <br />number of seeds per square foot, from 29.2 / ft2 to 75.1 / ft2. Much of the increase is due to <br />the substantial increase of sagebrush seed from 0.02 pounds PLS/acre to 0.5 pounds <br />PLS/acre. Although inclusion of sagebrush seed is contrary to the intended vegetation <br />community that targets the grazingland land use, this change has been adopted to increase the <br />potential for development of shrub patches within the grassland community as well as to add <br />structural diversity to the community and overall reclaimed area. If too much sage results <br />from this mix for the intended land use, the amount of sagebrush seed can be reduced. If <br />excess shrub numbers result from early revegetation efforts, then managerial techniques are <br />readily available to reduce sage populations once the land surface has been transferred back <br />to the landowner. <br />Table 2.05-8, List of Contingency Substitutions for Table 2.05-7 and Table 2.05-9, provides <br />the approved list of contingency substitutions for the seed mixes should certain taxa be <br />unavailable or unwarranted in any given year. <br />The reclamation seed mixture for areas targeting sagebrush steppe (wildlife habitat land use - <br />sage grouse brood rearing habitat), as shown in Table 2.05-9, Reclamation Seed Mixture, <br />also contains sufficient diversity for ecological stability. This mixture contains a variety of <br />grasses, forbs and shrub species well adapted to the soil and moisture conditions found at <br />2.05-49 Revision Date: 3/14/08 <br />Revision No.: TR-72
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