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4/19/2024 9:24:00 AM
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4/19/2024 9:10:55 AM
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CM City Clerk-City Council
CM City Clerk-City Council - Document Type
Staff Report
Document Date (6)
4/2/2024
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Reso 2024-029 MND for WPCP Treatment Wetland and Shoreline Resilience Project
(Amended)
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\City Clerk\City Council\Resolutions\2024
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B IOLOGICAL A SSESSMENT <br />A PRIL 2020 <br />S AN L EANDRO T REATMENT W ETLAND P ROJECT <br />S AN L EANDRO, A LAMEDA C OUNTY, C ALIFORNIA <br /> <br />P:\TER2001\BA\San Leandro Treatment Plant BA 4‐7‐20.docx (04/07/20) 19 <br />3.0 STATUS OF FEDERALLY LISTED SPECIES AND CRITICAL HABITAT <br />3.1 ENVIRONMENTAL BASELINE <br />3.1.1 Land Use and Topography <br />The Action Area includes a constructed storage basin, access roads, ruderal vegetation, native and <br />non‐native trees and shrubs, and rock‐rip along the shoreline of a tidal slough (Figure 2). <br />3.1.2 Land Cover Types <br />The Action Area includes a 4.3‐acre storage basin and adjacent upland areas owned by the City and <br />managed by the San Leandro WPCP and the tidal slough that flows from Oyster Bay and the San <br />Francisco Bay (Figures 1 and 2). The triangular‐shaped basin is located at the western end of the <br />WPCP and the drainage channel to the east represents the former San Francisco Bay shoreline <br />(Figure 2). The basin is bordered on the south and east by a tidal slough with direct connection to <br />the San Francisco Bay, and on the north by the Oakland International Airport and the Metropolitan <br />Golf Links course. The San Francisco Bay Trail runs along the northwestern edge of the basin. Other <br />surrounding land uses include a gun club (property owned by the City), a waste transfer facility, and <br />the Oyster Bay Regional Shoreline Area. The storage basin is void of vegetation in all areas except <br />the perimeter of the basin, with vegetation consisting of salt marsh plants along the lower perimeter <br />of the basin and upland plants along the banks of the basin. Soils on the project site are mapped as <br />Xeropsamments, fill and Xerorthents, clayey (UC Davis SoilWeb 2020). <br />3.1.3 Vegetation <br />Vegetation within the project site includes salt marsh vegetation along the tidal slough and basin <br />and trees, shrubs, and ruderal (weedy) plants along the banks of the basin, levee, and access road <br />that surrounds the basin. Trees growing on the site consist of primarily ornamental species, such as <br />acacia (Acacia sp.) and olive (Olea europaea), but at least one small native coast live oak (Quercus <br />agrifolia) and native willow (Salix sp.) were observed along the bank of the basin. Shrubs observed <br />include coyote brush (Baccharis pilularis), toyon (Heteromeles arbutifolia), Himalayan blackberry <br />(Rubus armeniacus), and various ornamental shrubs. The non‐native ruderal and annual grassland <br />vegetation includes several grasses and forbs, such as pampas grass (Cortaderia jubata), fennel <br />(Foeniculum vulgare), wild oats (Avena sp.), brome (Bromus sp.), Italian rye grass (Festuca perennis), <br />bristly ox‐tongue (Helminthotheca echioides), cheeseweed (Malva parviflora), and short‐pod <br />mustard (Hirschfeldia incana). A small patch of native blue wild rye (Elymus glaucus) was also <br />observed along the upper bank of the slough. Appendix A provides a list of the plant species <br />observed during LSA’s survey. <br />Vegetation is sparse within the tidal slough and lower banks of the levee. Plants observed along the <br />tidal slough consists of: pickleweed (Salicornia pacifica), fleshy jaumea (Jaumea carnosa), and <br />cordgrass (Spartina sp.) along the lower tidal zone; saltgrass (Distichlis spicata) and marsh gumplant <br />(Grindelia stricta var. angustifolia) along the middle tidal zone; and upland vegetation, such as <br />pampas grass, fennel, and coyote brush, along the top of the slough’s levee.
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