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ftleo <br />t 1niversity <br />Knowledge to Go Places <br />June 22, 2012 <br />Angela Bellantoni <br />Environmental Alternatives Inc. <br />1107 Main Street <br />Canon City, CO 81212 <br />Dear Angela: <br />The Colorado Natural Heritage Program (CNHP) is in receipt of your request for information regarding the <br />Sharp Gravel Pit project area of interest in Bent County, Colorado. In response, I have searched our <br />Biodiversity Tracking and Conservation System (BIOTICS) for natural heritage elements (occurrences of <br />significant natural communities and rare, threatened or endangered plants and animals) documented from the <br />vicinity of the area specified in your request, specifically within a two -mile radius of the location provided by <br />map to CNHP by Environmental Alternatives Inc. for the purposes of this request. <br />The enclosed report describes natural heritage resources known from this area and gives location (by <br />Township, Range, and Section), precision information, and the date of last observation of the element at that <br />location. This report includes elements known to occur within the specified project site, as well as elements <br />known from similar landscapes near the site. Please note that "precision" reflects the resolution of original <br />data. For example, an herbarium record from "4 miles east of Colorado Springs" provides much less spatial <br />information than a topographic map showing the exact location of the occurrence. "Precision' codes of <br />Seconds, Minutes, and General are defined in the footer of the enclosed report. <br />The report also outlines the status of known elements. We have included status according to Natural Heritage <br />Program methodology and legal status under state and federal statutes. Natural Heritage ranks are <br />standardized across the Heritage Program network, and are assigned for global and state levels of rarity. They <br />range from "1" for critically imperiled or extremely rare elements, to "5" for those that are demonstrably <br />secure. <br />You may notice that some occurrences do not have sections listed. Those species have been designated as <br />"sensitive" due to their rarity and threats by human activity. Peregrine falcons, for example, are susceptible to <br />human breeders removing falcon eggs from their nests. For these species, CNHP does not normally provide <br />location information beyond township and range. Please contact us should you require more detailed <br />information for sensitive occurrences. <br />There are multiple CNHP designated Potential Conservation Areas (PCAs) and no Network of Conservation <br />Areas (NCAs) located within the vicinity of your project area (see enclosed shapef le and PDF site reports). In <br />order to successfully protect populations or occurrences, it is necessary to delineate conservation areas. These <br />conservation areas focus on capturing the ecological processes that are necessary to support the continued <br />existence of a particular element of natural heritage significance. Conservation areas may include a single <br />occurrence of a rare element or a suite of rare elements or significant features. <br />