My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
5B CONSENT
CityHall
>
City Clerk
>
City Council
>
Agenda Packets
>
2024
>
Packet 20240402
>
5B CONSENT
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
4/19/2024 9:24:00 AM
Creation date
4/19/2024 9:10:55 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
CM City Clerk-City Council
CM City Clerk-City Council - Document Type
Staff Report
Document Date (6)
4/2/2024
Retention
PERM
Document Relationships
Reso 2024-029 MND for WPCP Treatment Wetland and Shoreline Resilience Project
(Amended)
Path:
\City Clerk\City Council\Resolutions\2024
Jump to thumbnail
< previous set
next set >
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
372
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
<br />4/17/20 (P:\TER2001\BA\Special‐Status Species Biological Resources Habitat Assessment 4‐17‐20 .docx) 1 <br />Table A: Special‐Status Species Evaluated for the Project Site <br />Species Status <br />(Federal/State) Habitat Potential for Occurrencea <br />Invertebrates <br />San Bruno elfin butterfly <br />Callophrys mossii bayensis <br />FE/– Located on steep, north facing <br />slopes within the fog belt in <br />coastal, mountainous areas with <br />grassy ground cover; mainly in the <br />vicinity of San Bruno Mountain, San <br />Mateo County; Sedum <br />spathulifolium is the larval host <br />plant. <br />No suitable habitat is present. No CNDDB <br />occurrences within 5 miles. <br />Monarch Butterfly <br />Danaus plexippus <br />California Overwintering <br />Population <br />Sensitive (S2S3) Winter colony sites occur along the <br />California coast in wind protected <br />tree groves (eucalyptus, Monterey <br />pine, and cypress) where nectar <br />and water resources are nearby. <br />No suitable habitat present at the project <br />site. No CNDDB occurrences within 5 miles. <br />Vernal pool fairy shrimp <br />Branchinecta lynchi <br />FT/– Endemic to the grasslands of the <br />Central Valley, and central and <br />south coast mountains in small, <br />clear water sandstone‐depression <br />and grassed swale, earth slump, or <br />basalt‐flow depression rain‐filled <br />pools. <br />No suitable habitat including seasonal <br />wetlands is present. No CNDDB occurrences <br />within 5 miles. <br />Fish <br />Delta smelt <br />Hypomesus transpacificus <br /> <br />FT/– Sacramento‐San Joaquin Delta. <br />Seasonally in Suisun Bay, Carquinez <br />Strait and San Pablo Bay; seldom <br />found at salinities greater than 10 <br />ppt; most often at salinities less <br />than 2ppt. <br />Project site is outside of known range for <br />species. <br />Longfin smelt <br />Spirinchus thaleichthys <br />FC/ST, SSC Open waters of estuaries, mostly in <br />the middle or bottom water <br />column. Prefers salinities of 15‐30 <br />ppt, but can be found in completely <br />freshwater to almost pure <br />seawater. <br />The tidal slough and surrounding harbor are <br />not known as breeding grounds for this <br />species. Species detected in the Oakland <br />Harbor in 2005 (CDFW 2020) and could <br />occur in the tidal slough. No historical <br />occurrences have been recorded as part of <br />the San Francisco Bay Study at the CDFW <br />survey stations near the project site (CDFW <br />2018). The CNDDB maps the onsite tidal <br />slough as part of occurrence #22 for longfin <br />smelt (CDFW 2020). <br />Tidewater goby <br />Eucyclogobius newberryi <br />FE/SSC Shallow brackish lagoons and low <br />gradient stream reaches with <br />aquatic vegetation and areas of <br />open bottom; most common in the <br />upstream portions of lagoons with <br />barrier beaches. Generally not <br />found in lagoons with open mouths <br />and strong tidal flow. Favors low <br />salinity, generally less than 10 parts <br />per thousand (ppt). <br />Species is considered extinct from the San <br />Francisco Bay (Moyle 2002).
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.