81_FR_1542 81 FR 1534 - Injurious Wildlife Species; Listing Salamanders Due to Risk of Salamander Chytrid Fungus

81 FR 1534 - Injurious Wildlife Species; Listing Salamanders Due to Risk of Salamander Chytrid Fungus

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 8 (January 13, 2016)

Page Range1534-1556
FR Document2016-00452

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is amending its regulations under the Lacey Act to add all species of salamanders from 20 genera, of which there are 201 species, to the list of injurious amphibians. With this interim rule, both importation into the United States and interstate transportation between States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or possession of the United States of any live or dead specimen, including parts, of these 20 genera of salamanders are prohibited, except by permit for zoological, educational, medical, or scientific purposes (in accordance with permit conditions) or by Federal agencies without a permit solely for their own use. This action is necessary to protect the interests of wildlife and wildlife resources from the introduction, establishment, and spread of the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans into ecosystems of the United States. The fungus affects salamanders, with lethal effects on many species, and is not yet known to be found in the United States. Because of the devastating effect that we expect the fungus will have on native U.S. salamanders if introduced and, therefore, the need to act immediately to prevent the disease from being introduced into the United States, the Service is publishing this interim rule.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 8 (Wednesday, January 13, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 8 (Wednesday, January 13, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 1534-1556]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-00452]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Fish and Wildlife Service

50 CFR Part 16

RIN 1018-BA77
[Docket No. FWS-HQ-FAC-2015-0005; FXFR13360900000-156-FF09F14000]


Injurious Wildlife Species; Listing Salamanders Due to Risk of 
Salamander Chytrid Fungus

AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.

ACTION: Interim rule; request for comments; notice of availability of 
economic analysis.

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SUMMARY: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is amending its regulations 
under the Lacey Act to add all species of salamanders from 20 genera, 
of which there are 201 species, to the list of injurious amphibians. 
With this interim rule, both importation into the United States and 
interstate transportation between States, the District of Columbia, the 
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or possession of the 
United States of any live or dead specimen, including parts, of these 
20 genera of salamanders are prohibited, except by permit for 
zoological, educational, medical, or scientific purposes (in accordance 
with permit conditions) or by Federal agencies without a permit solely 
for their own use. This action is necessary to protect the interests of 
wildlife and wildlife resources from the introduction, establishment, 
and spread of the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans into 
ecosystems of the United States. The fungus affects salamanders, with 
lethal effects on many species, and is not yet known to be found in the 
United States. Because of the devastating effect that we expect the 
fungus will have on native U.S. salamanders if introduced and, 
therefore, the need to act immediately to prevent the disease from 
being introduced into the United States, the Service is publishing this 
interim rule.

DATES: This interim rule is effective as of January 28, 2016. 
Interested persons are invited to submit written comments on this 
interim rule on or before March 14, 2016

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 
Search for Docket No. FWS-HQ-FAC-2015-0005 and follow the instructions 
for submitting comments.
     Mail, Hand Delivery, or Courier: Public Comments 
Processing, Attn: FWS-HQ-FAC-2015-0005; Division of Policy, 
Performance, and Management Programs; United States Fish and Wildlife 
Service; MS: BPHC; 5275 Leesburg Pike; Falls Church, VA 22041-3803.
    We will not accept email or faxes. We will post all comments on 
http://www.regulations.gov. This generally means that we will post any 
personal information you provide us (see Comments on the Content of the 
Interim Rule for more information). All submissions received must 
include ``Docket No. FWS-HQ-FAC-2015-0005'' for this rulemaking. For 
detailed instructions on submitting comments and additional information 
on the rulemaking process, see Comments on the Content of the Interim 
Rule.
    Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or 
comments received, go to http://www.regulations.gov and find Docket No. 
FWS-HQ-FAC-2015-0005.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jason Goldberg or Susan Jewell, 
Injurious Wildlife Listing Coordinators, United States Fish and 
Wildlife Service, Branch of Aquatic Invasive Species; MS: FAC; 5275 
Leesburg Pike; Falls Church, VA 22041-3803 telephone 703-358-1715. If 
you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD), please call the 
Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800-877-8339.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Executive Summary

    Under the Lacey Act (18 U.S.C. 42, as amended), the Secretary of 
the Interior may list by regulation those wild mammals, wild birds, 
fish, mollusks, crustaceans, amphibians, reptiles, and the offspring or 
eggs of any of the foregoing that are injurious to human beings, to the 
interests of agriculture, horticulture, or forestry, or to the wildlife 
or wildlife resources of the United States.
    We have determined that salamanders that can carry the fungus 
Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans (Bsal) are injurious to wildlife and 
wildlife resources of the United States. This determination was based 
on a review of the literature and an evaluation under the criteria for 
injuriousness by the Service. The salamander species listed by this 
interim rule are those found within a genus for which we have 
confirmation that at least one species in that genus is a carrier of 
Bsal, and there is no countervailing conclusive evidence suggesting 
that some species within the genus are not carriers. We find that, due 
to shared characteristics by species within a genus, other species 
within these genera are also highly likely to be carriers of Bsal. 
Although additional salamander species could be at risk from Bsal 
infection or could serve as a carrier, we are not listing species in 
those genera because they have not yet been tested.
    The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service, USFWS, or we) is 
amending its regulations under the Lacey Act to add to the list of 
injurious wildlife all species of live and dead specimens from 20 
genera, including body parts, from the amphibian order Caudata, which 
includes animals commonly referred to as salamanders, newts, and other 
names (hereafter, salamanders). The purpose of listing these species as 
injurious wildlife is to prevent the introduction, establishment, and 
spread of the fungus (Bsal) in the wild in the United States. The 
fungus affects only salamanders, has lethal effects on many salamander 
species, and is not yet known to be found in the United States.
    The United States has the greatest diversity of salamanders in the 
world, the salamanders are a vital part of native ecosystems, and 
numerous salamander populations are at risk of endangerment from Bsal. 
Experience with the introduction of Bsal into the Netherlands and 
associated deleterious

[[Page 1535]]

effects to native salamanders, along with laboratory research, confirms 
that Bsal can be introduced and cause substantial and immediate harm in 
the United States.
    A risk assessment conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey concluded 
that the potential for Bsal introduction into the United States is 
high, the United States has suitable conditions for Bsal survival, and 
the consequences of introduction into the United States are expected to 
be severe and occur across a wide range of the United States. The main 
pathway for the global spread of Bsal is the international trade in 
salamanders. The ability and effectiveness of measures to prevent or 
control Bsal is currently low. Trade in wildlife occurs on a global 
scale, and amphibians are one of the most commonly traded animals. 
Therefore, listing the 20 genera will be effective at reducing the 
likelihood that Bsal enters the United States and presents a threat to 
native salamander species.
    Of the 190 native U.S. salamander species, at least 2 species are 
lethally vulnerable to Bsal and at least 1 is tolerant of Bsal 
infection. At least four are resistant to Bsal infection, of which one 
is expected to be a carrier because Bsal was able to invade the skin of 
that species long enough to move or transmit the fungus to other 
salamanders. In addition, researchers have identified a non-native 
species that is lethally vulnerable to Bsal that is found within a 
fifth genus that also includes native species. On this basis, the 
Service finds that at least 67 native species from 5 genera are 
carriers of Bsal.
    Native salamander species that demonstrate limited disease under 
experimental conditions may demonstrate more severe clinical disease 
when infection is combined with additional stressors in the wild. We 
concluded from our analysis that the introduction of Bsal into the 
United States can cause significant, adverse, population-level effects 
in native species. As keystone species, loss of salamanders from Bsal 
infection would have significant impacts on ecosystems, including food 
webs and nutrient cycling.
    All 20 genera of salamanders, plus any new species that may be 
identified in the future within the genera listed by this interim rule, 
are found to be injurious. Even if a salamander found to be injurious 
could not establish a population in the wild, an infected salamander in 
captivity can still transmit Bsal to native populations if that 
salamander escapes or if material touching it is disposed of 
improperly. Bsal is capable of surviving outside of a host and causing 
extensive damage to wildlife and wildlife resources, including 
federally endangered and threatened species. Eradicating Bsal would be 
extremely difficult once introduced and established, the ability to 
rehabilitate disturbed ecosystems is expected to be low, and 
controlling Bsal is not practical. Prophylactic treatments for imports 
of salamanders to manage Bsal are in development but are not yet fully 
tested or feasible.
    We are amending our regulations under an interim rule and are 
foregoing a proposed rule. The interim rule will take effect on the 
date specified above in DATES, with public comment to conclude as set 
forth in DATES. Based on public comments received, the interim rule may 
be revised. If Bsal is introduced into the United States, it is 
expected to have negative effects on many species of native 
salamanders. No conclusive evidence exists that suggests that Bsal is 
found in the United States. Therefore, the opportunity exists to take 
urgent action now to prevent the introduction of Bsal. Listing 20 
genera of salamanders as injurious wildlife is an essential step in 
helping to keep Bsal out of the United States by preventing 
introduction of salamanders that serve as carriers of the fungus and 
are capable of introducing it to the United States. This interim rule 
lists some species that are currently in trade and some that are not; 
the focus is on species that are likely carriers of Bsal and capable of 
transmitting it to the same or other species.
    Consistent with the statutory language and congressional intent, it 
is the Service's longstanding and continued position that the Lacey 
Act, 18 U.S.C. 42, prohibits both the importation into the United 
States and all interstate transportation between States, the District 
of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or 
possession of the United States, including interstate transportation 
between States within the Continental United States, of injurious 
wildlife, regardless of the preliminary injunction decision in U.S. 
Association of Reptile Keepers v. Jewell, No. 13-2007 (D.D.C. May 12, 
2015). The Service's interpretation of 18 U.S.C. 42(a)(1) finds support 
in the plain language of the statute, the Lacey Act's purpose, 
legislative history, and congressional ratification. First, the 
statute's use of the disjunctive ``or'' to separate the listed 
geographic entities indicates that each location has independent 
significance. Second, Congress enacted the Lacey Act in 1900 for the 
purpose of, among other things, regulating the introduction of species 
in localities, not merely large territories, where they have not 
previously existed. See 16 U.S.C. 701. Third, the legislative history 
of Congress's many amendments to the Lacey Act since its enactment in 
1900 shows that Congress intended, from the very beginning, for the 
Service to regulate the interstate shipment of certain injurious 
wildlife. Finally, recent Congresses have made clear that Congress 
interprets 18 U.S.C. 42(a)(1) as prohibiting interstate transport of 
injurious wildlife between the states within the continental United 
States. In amending Sec.  42(a)(1) to add bighead carp and zebra 
mussels as injurious wildlife without making other changes to the 
provision, Congress repeated and ratified the Service's interpretation 
of the statute as prohibiting all interstate transport of injurious 
species.
    The prohibitions on importation and all interstate transportation 
are both necessary to prevent the introduction, establishment, and 
spread of injurious species that threaten human health or the interests 
of agriculture, horticulture, forestry, or the wildlife or wildlife 
resources of the United States. By listing the 20 genera as injurious 
wildlife, both importation and interstate transportation of any live or 
dead specimen, including parts, is prohibited, except by permit (in 
accordance with conditions) for zoological, educational, medical, or 
scientific purposes or by Federal agencies without a permit solely for 
their own use.
    The Service conducted an economic analysis and regulatory 
flexibility analysis as required under the rulemaking process. The 
draft economic analysis considers five alternatives: (1) No action; (2) 
list species that were shown by Martel et al. (2014) and other sources 
to be carriers of Bsal; (3) list all species in genera where there is 
at least one confirmed carrier and all species in the genus are likely 
to be a carrier, and there is no countervailing conclusive evidence 
suggesting that some species within the genus are not carriers; (4) 
list all salamanders; and (5) require a health certificate stating that 
the animal being moved is free of Bsal, in lieu of or in addition to 
listing.
    The annual retail sales loss of listing 201 species, based on the 
20 genera listed, is estimated to be $3.9 million, of which $2.3 
million are losses to small businesses. Impacts per small business may 
be as high as $453,000 for importers and $23,000 for domestic breeders. 
The cost estimate represents the loss of revenue from listing the 
species to companies or individuals involved in the importation, 
interstate movement, or final consumer sales of salamanders that are 
imported and

[[Page 1536]]

moved between States. No significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities is anticipated. The economic loss including 
direct, indirect, and induced effects from loss in revenue to pet 
stores is estimated to be $10.0 million. Benefits from decreases in 
risk from Bsal for ecological, commercial, recreational, and non-use 
values are not quantifiable. The benefits from these additional factors 
are unknown, but are certainly positive.
    From 2004 to 2014, nearly 2.5 million live salamanders of at least 
59 species were imported into the United States. The 228,000 average 
annually imported salamanders are primarily for the pet trade. Fewer 
than 100 total businesses, institutions, and individuals imported 
salamanders over this time period (USFWS OLE 2015) for a retail value 
of $44 million dollars. Salamander imports and the number of businesses 
declined during this period, which may lead to an overestimation of the 
economic losses due to the uncertainty of industry and consumer 
responses over the time period used. The timeframe of the trade 
analysis does not make a difference from a biological perspective of 
risk. Species are being listed regardless of whether they are in trade. 
The alternatives are based on the level of perceived risk, which is 
informed by the current state of scientific knowledge.
    This interim rule is effective as of the date specified above in 
DATES. Interested persons are invited to submit written comments on 
this interim rule on or before the date set forth in DATES.

Background

Purpose of Listing as Injurious

    The purpose of listing the 20 genera of live and dead specimens, 
including parts, from the order Caudata commonly referred to as 
salamanders, newts, and other names (hereafter, salamanders) as 
injurious wildlife is to prevent the accidental or intentional 
introduction of salamanders into the United States that are expected to 
serve as carriers of Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans (hereafter, 
Bsal), a fungus that poses a risk to native species of salamanders. If 
Bsal is introduced into wild populations of native salamanders, we 
expect it to cause significant damage to wildlife and the wildlife 
resources of the United States.

Need for the Interim Rule

    Under the Lacey Act (Act) (18 U.S.C. 42, as amended), the Service, 
through the Secretary of the Interior, may prescribe by regulation any 
wild mammals, wild birds, fish, mollusks, crustaceans, amphibians, 
reptiles, or the offspring or eggs of any of the foregoing found to be 
injurious to human beings, to the interests of agriculture, 
horticulture, forestry, or to wildlife or the wildlife resources of the 
United States. Salamanders are amphibians, and the Service has the 
authority to list them under the Lacey Act when it finds that they are 
injurious to one or more of the statutory interests. We may list 
species before they are introduced into the United States and, 
therefore, are able to harm interests of the United States as defined 
under the Act. We have determined that salamanders that potentially 
carry Bsal are injurious to wildlife and wildlife resources of the 
United States. With this interim rule, we are attempting to prevent the 
introduction and subsequent establishment of the chytrid fungus, Bsal, 
which is a pathogen capable of causing significant harm to native 
salamander species and their ecosystems. As described below under Role 
of Salamanders in the Ecosystem, the benefits that these native 
salamander species provide to ecosystems in ensuring ecosystem health 
and stability, and, in turn, the ecosystem services that benefit 
people, are significant.
    Martel et al. (2014) and Cunningham et al. (2015) (as explained 
further in Chytridcrisis (2015b)) identified some of the salamander 
species that can carry Bsal and are at risk from infection. The 
research tested a limited number of the approximately 681 known species 
of salamanders that exist worldwide and found that not every species 
was negatively affected by the fungus. However, the results clearly 
indicate a severe threat for many species of salamanders that will be 
negatively affected by this pathogen, including 2 of the 7 species 
tested that are also native to the United States and were found to be 
lethally vulnerable to the fungus. Recent research has highlighted 
concerns of emerging infectious disease of fungal origin that can cause 
a significant loss in biodiversity and ecosystem services (Fisher et 
al. 2012); Bsal appears to be the latest.
    The research results about Bsal and concerns about emerging 
infectious disease, especially Spitzen-van der Sluijs et al. (2013), 
Martel et al. (2013), and Martel et al. (2014), have generated a strong 
response from academia, industry groups, and conservation and other 
organizations who have written the Service seeking quick and decisive 
action to ensure Bsal does not have a similar impact on salamander 
populations that Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) has had on frogs. 
We also received a petition from the Center for Biological Diversity 
and SAVE THE FROGS! on May 18, 2015, to take action to prevent the 
introduction of Bsal into the United States (Center for Biological 
Diversity and SAVE THE FROGS! 2015). In response to the scientific 
findings, letters to the Service, and the petition the Service 
initiated a review to determine whether salamanders capable of carrying 
Bsal should be listed as injurious. Based on the Service's genus-level 
carrier extrapolation from data obtained from Martel et al. (2014), and 
because Bsal has not been found in the United States (Martel et al. 
2014; Muletz et al. 2014; Bales et al. 2015), the opportunity exists to 
take urgent action to prevent the introduction of Bsal. This action 
will help safeguard U.S. wildlife and natural resources, while 
providing time for monitoring and other measures to be developed that 
may allow safe trade in salamanders to resume later.
    We reviewed Bsal and the salamander species that carry this fungus 
using the Injurious Wildlife Evaluation Criteria, described in more 
detail as part of this interim rule in Factors That Contribute to 
Salamanders Being Considered Injurious, which the Service developed to 
evaluate whether a species qualifies as injurious under the Act. The 
resulting analysis serves as a basis for the Service's regulatory 
decision regarding injurious wildlife species listings. This interim 
rule finds that Bsal is a significant threat to the wildlife and 
wildlife resources of the United States and lists 20 genera of 
salamanders that we have determined to be injurious because they are 
likely carriers of Bsal.
    Rulemaking under the Act is governed by the Administrative 
Procedure Act (APA) (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.). The process of issuing a 
proposed rule, providing the opportunity for public comment, and 
completing a final rule can take a significant amount of time to 
complete. During this time, the species proposed for listing are still 
allowed to be imported and transported, offering increased 
opportunities for introduction, establishment, and harm. Under section 
553(b)(3)(B) of the APA, however, a proposed rule is not required 
``when the agency for good cause finds (and incorporates the finding 
and a brief statement of reasons therefor in the rules issued) that 
notice and public procedure thereon are impracticable, unnecessary, or 
contrary to the public interest.'' There is good cause to forgo notice 
and public comment on a proposed rule in this instance and instead take 
immediate action in the form of an interim rule to help prevent this 
fungus from being introduced, established, or spread in the United

[[Page 1537]]

States. Providing notice and public comment prior to implementing the 
injurious wildlife prohibitions would be contrary to the public 
interest because of the need to take immediate action due to the 
significant risk from Bsal. For these reasons, we also find good cause 
in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3) to make the interim rule 
effective less than 30 days after the date of publication. Due to the 
significant risk of introduction, establishment, and spread of Bsal in 
the United States, this interim rule will take effect 15 days after 
publication in the Federal Register. Based on prior experience, a 
shorter-than-normal effective date will also help reduce the risk that 
importers will rush to import these species before the listing becomes 
effective. For example, in the case of snakeheads (Channidae), the 
Service documented a nearly three-fold increase in the importation of 
snakeheads after the proposed rule was first announced (67 FR 48855; 
July 26, 2002) and before the final rule took effect, approximately two 
months later (67 FR 62202; October 4, 2002). However, we also recognize 
that an immediate effective date is not practical when live animals may 
be in transit on the day the interim rule takes effect. A delay of 15 
days before the interim rule goes into effect will allow for the 
reasonable completion of imports and transports already in progress and 
give wildlife inspectors and other law enforcement officers time to 
enforce the interim rule.
    Experience with the introduction of Bsal into the Netherlands and 
associated deleterious effects to native salamanders, along with 
laboratory research, confirms that Bsal can be introduced, establish, 
and spread and cause substantial and immediate harm in the United 
States (Spitzen-van der Sluijs et al. 2013; Martel et al. 2014; 
Cunningham et al. 2015; Chytridcrisis 2015b). The United States leads 
all other countries in salamander diversity (Partners in Amphibian and 
Reptile Conservation, Stein and Kutner 2000). Based on scientific 
evidence, we know that the fungus is lethal to at least 2 salamander 
species native to the United States. Of the 190 native U.S. species, we 
find that at least 67 species are carriers and 20 are not carriers. The 
remaining 103 species have not been evaluated, and many of these 
species may also be affected by this potentially deadly fungus. While 
the Service's greatest concern will be for species that are lethally 
vulnerable to Bsal, salamander species known to be tolerant of or 
susceptible to Bsal infection under experimental conditions may also 
develop clinical disease or increased severity of disease, 
respectively, when infection is combined with additional stressors in 
the wild, as has been found for other diseases, including those in 
amphibians (Wobeser 2007; Kerby et al. 2011; Kiesecker 2011).
    In the United States, Bsal has either not been introduced, has been 
introduced but has failed to establish, or is present but has not been 
positively detected. Although we do not have any conclusive evidence 
showing that introductions have occurred, history from other pathogens 
similar to Bsal, such as Bd, however, suggests that the fungus is 
likely to spread quickly throughout the United States if it is not 
prevented from being introduced. Moreover, efforts to control or 
eradicate introduced or established invasive species and manage the 
costs they incur to society are generally less effective and more 
expensive and difficult than efforts that prevent establishment (Leung 
et al. 2002; Finnoff et al. 2007). Prevention of invasive species is 
typically the most cost-effective measure to avoid the damage that such 
species cause (Leung et al. 2002; Lodge et al. 2006; Keller and 
Springborn 2014). As noted in the National Invasive Species Management 
Plan, ``prevention is the first line of defense'' and ``can be the most 
cost effective approach because once a species becomes widespread, 
controlling it may require significant and sustained expenditures'' 
(National Invasive Species Council 2008).
    If Bsal has unknowingly been introduced but failed to establish for 
unknown reasons, it is still important to take action now because 
additional introductions increase the likelihood of establishment and 
harm. As more salamanders that can carry Bsal are imported into the 
United States, the probability increases that one or more of those 
salamanders, through a phenomenon called propagule pressure or 
``introduction effort,'' described in Lockwood et al. (2005) as a 
measure of the number of nonnative individuals released into a region, 
will give Bsal the opportunity to establish and spread.
    Listing the salamanders as injurious will help keep Bsal out of the 
United States by preventing the importation of salamanders capable of 
carrying the fungus and serving as the vector of introduction into U.S. 
ecosystems, thereby causing injurious effects consistent with the Act. 
Given the expected consequences that Bsal's introduction would have to 
wildlife and wildlife resources of the United States, we are listing 
species that we have determined to be injurious. This interim rule 
lists some species that are currently in trade as well as some that are 
not. We have the authority under the Act to list certain species as 
injurious even if they are not currently in trade or known to exist in 
the United States.
    The salamander species listed by this interim rule are those found 
within genera for which we have evidence that at least one species in 
that genus is a carrier of Bsal with no countervailing conclusive 
evidence that other species in that genus are not carriers. We describe 
our rationale for this course of action below under Classification and 
Status as Carriers. Our decision-making included the following 
considerations: All 20 genera of salamanders, plus any new species 
identified within the genera listed by this interim rule, are found to 
be injurious because suitable climate exists in parts of the United 
States to support Bsal; even if a salamander listed by this interim 
rule could not establish a population in the wild, an infected 
salamander in captivity (or the water and soil in which it came into 
contact) can transmit Bsal to native populations; Bsal is capable of 
causing extensive damage to wildlife and wildlife resources, including 
federally endangered and threatened species; eradicating Bsal would be 
extremely difficult once introduced and established; and controlling 
Bsal is not practical.
    Although this interim rule takes effect on the date specified above 
in DATES, it will still provide the public with a period of time to 
comment on the listing and associated documents. The final rule will 
contain responses to comments received on the interim rule, state the 
final decision, and provide the justification for that decision.

Listing Species That Carry Pathogens

    Pathogens are agents such as viruses, bacteria, and fungi that 
cause diseases in animals and plants. The Service does not have the 
direct authority under the Act to list pathogens as injurious. We also 
cannot list or regulate fomites (materials such as water that can 
transmit pathogens). However, wild mammals, wild birds, fish, mollusks, 
crustaceans, amphibians, or reptiles that are hosts to pathogens, such 
as viruses, bacteria, or fungi that cause disease, can be injurious if 
the likelihood, scope, and severity of effects significantly affect one 
or more of the interests listed in the Act. Even if the host species 
cannot establish populations in the wild, it can present significant 
risk if the pathogen the host is carrying can infect wildlife or 
wildlife resources or affect human beings or the interests of 
agriculture, horticulture, or forestry in the United States. Among 
other impacts, diseases

[[Page 1538]]

caused by introduced pathogens reduce biodiversity (the variety of 
different types of life on earth) and have been implicated in the local 
extinction of many animal taxa (Daszak et al. 2000).
    We have previously listed species under the Act that serve as hosts 
to pathogens, as in the case of fish in the salmon family Salmonidae 
(32 FR 20655; December 21, 1967, 33 FR 6827; May 4, 1968, and 58 FR 
58976; November 5, 1993). Members of the family Salmonidae (salmon, 
trout, and char) are not injurious provided they are free from certain 
pathogens. However, salmon that are alive or are dead and uneviscerated 
(internal organs have not been removed) without a health certificate 
declaring that the fish are pathogen free are injurious to wildlife and 
wildlife resources due to the risk of transmitting pathogens that cause 
devastating diseases in fish. Although prophylactic treatments for 
imports of salamanders to manage Bsal are in development, they are not 
yet fully tested or feasible.

Listing and Evaluation Process

    The regulations contained in part 16 of title 50 of the Code of 
Federal Regulations (CFR) implement the Lacey Act and include the lists 
of all species determined by the Service or by Congress to be 
injurious. Under the terms of the Act, the Secretary of the Interior 
may prescribe by regulation those wild mammals, wild birds, fish, 
mollusks, crustaceans, amphibians, reptiles, and the offspring or eggs 
of any of the foregoing that are injurious to humans, to the interests 
of agriculture, horticulture, or forestry, or to the wildlife or 
wildlife resources of the United States. The lists of injurious 
wildlife species are found at 50 CFR 16.11-16.15. Under these 
regulations, species are added to the lists of injurious wildlife to 
protect statutorily defined interests from potential and known negative 
effects. Most species listed have the capacity to establish populations 
in the wild, spread, and cause harm. However, a species can be listed 
based solely on its capacity to cause harm. As noted in the previous 
section, dead, uneviscerated salmonids without a health certificate are 
not capable of establishing in the United States, but they are 
injurious because the pathogens they may carry are harmful.
    Under the Act, the Service can list species that are nonnative or 
indigenous to the United States. In the case of an indigenous species, 
for example, the Service may find that it is injurious because its 
transport and release into another State outside the species' range 
will cause harm to human beings, agricultural or forestry interests, or 
natural systems. Furthermore, a species does not have to be currently 
imported or present in the wild in the United States for the Service to 
list it as injurious. For species not yet imported into the United 
States, the objective of listing is to prevent that species' 
importation and likely introduction and possible establishment and 
spread in the wild, thereby preventing injurious effects consistent 
with the purposes of the Act. For species that are present in the 
United States, the Act prevents the further introduction, 
establishment, or spread of the species by prohibiting interstate 
transport.
    Importation into the United States of an injurious species is 
prohibited. Transportation between the States, the District of 
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any territory or 
possession of the United States of an injurious species is also 
prohibited. These prohibited activities may be undertaken by permit for 
zoological, educational, medical, or scientific purposes (in accordance 
with permit regulations at 50 CFR 16.22), or by Federal agencies 
without a permit solely for their own use, upon filing a written 
declaration with the District Director of Customs and the U.S. Fish and 
Wildlife Service inspector at the port of entry. The Act does not 
regulate intrastate transport (transport within a State or territory) 
or possession of injurious species. Any regulations pertaining to the 
transport or use of these species within a particular State or U.S. 
territory are the responsibility of that State or territory.
    The Service uses criteria, identified below, to evaluate whether a 
species does or does not qualify as injurious under the Act. The 
analysis that is developed using these criteria serves as a general 
basis for the Service's regulatory decision regarding injurious 
wildlife species listings. Biologists and risk managers within the 
Service who are knowledgeable about a species that is being evaluated 
assess both the factors that contribute to and the factors that reduce 
the likelihood of injuriousness.
    (1) Factors that contribute to being considered injurious:
     The likelihood of release or escape;
     Potential to survive, become established, and spread;
     Impacts on wildlife resources or ecosystems through 
hybridization and competition for food and habitats, habitat 
degradation and destruction, predation, and pathogen transfer;
     Impacts to threatened and endangered species and their 
habitats;
     Impacts to human beings, forestry, horticulture, and 
agriculture; and
     Wildlife or habitat damages that may occur from control 
measures.
    (2) Factors that reduce the likelihood of the species being 
considered as injurious:
     Ability to prevent escape and establishment;
     Potential to eradicate or manage established populations 
(for example, making organisms sterile);
     Ability to rehabilitate disturbed ecosystems;
     Ability to prevent or control the spread of pathogens or 
parasites; and
     Any potential ecological benefits to introduction.
    In the case of this interim rule, the issue is not whether a given 
salamander species is invasive, but rather the role of salamanders in 
introducing the Bsal fungus into the United States and the scope and 
severity of effects caused by salamanders that are carriers of Bsal on 
human beings or the interests of agriculture, horticulture, or 
forestry, or the wildlife or wildlife resources of the United States.

Comments on the Content of the Interim Rule

    We are soliciting public comments and supporting data on the draft 
economic analysis, the draft regulatory flexibility analysis, and this 
interim rule to add all species from 20 genera of salamanders to the 
list of injurious amphibians under the Act. We will review the public 
comments for the preparation of our final rule. The draft economic 
analysis and regulatory flexibility analysis and this interim rule will 
be available on http://www.regulations.gov under Docket No. FWS-HQ-FAC-
2015-0005. You may submit your comments and materials concerning this 
interim rule by one of the methods listed in ADDRESSES. We will not 
accept comments sent by email or fax or to an address not listed in 
ADDRESSES.
    We will post your entire comment--including your personal 
identifying information--on http://www.regulations.gov. If your written 
comments provide personal identifying information, you may request at 
the top of your document that we withhold this information from public 
review. However, we cannot guarantee that we will be able to do so.
    Comments and materials we receive, as well as supporting 
documentation we used in preparing this interim rule, will be available 
for public inspection on http://www.regulations.gov under Docket No. 
FWS-HQ-FAC-2015-0005, or by appointment, during normal

[[Page 1539]]

business hours at the Service's office in Falls Church, VA (see FOR 
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
    We are soliciting public comments and supporting data to gain 
additional information, and we specifically seek comment on the 
following questions:
    (1) How many of the species listed by this rule are currently in 
production for wholesale or retail sale, and in how many and which 
States?
    (2) How many businesses sell one or more of the species listed by 
this rule?
    (3) How many businesses breed one or more of the species?
    (4) What species listed as threatened or endangered by one or more 
States would be affected by the introduction of Bsal?
    (5) What provisions in the interim rule should the Service have 
considered with regard to: (a) The impact of the provision(s) 
(including any benefits and costs), if any, and (b) what alternatives, 
if any, the Service should consider, as well as the costs and benefits 
of those alternatives, paying specific attention to the effect of the 
rule on small entities?
    (6) How could the interim rule be modified to reduce costs or 
burdens for some or all entities, including small entities, consistent 
with the Service's requirements? For example, we seek comment on the 
distinct benefits and costs, both quantitative and qualitative, of (a) 
the prohibitions on importation and (b) the prohibitions on interstate 
transport of the species listed by this rule. What are the costs and 
benefits of the modifications?
    (7) Is there any evidence suggesting that Bsal has been introduced 
into the United States or may have already established?
    (8) Are there other pathways for Bsal into the United States that 
we should address? If so, what are they?
    (9) Is there evidence suggesting that any of the species listed by 
this rule are not carriers of Bsal? If so, what species?
    (10) Is there any evidence suggesting that additional species are 
carriers of Bsal and should be listed by this rule? If so, what 
species?
    (11) Are there methods (such as thermal exposure) that would allow 
salamanders imported into the United States to be reliably treated to 
help ensure Bsal is not introduced into the United States, and how 
could compliance be monitored?
    (12) Should the Service add eggs or other reproductive material of 
listed salamanders to the list of injurious wildlife because they may 
also carry Bsal?
    (13) For the species we are listing, are the scientific and common 
names the most appropriate ones accepted by the scientific community?
    (14) What are relevant Federal, State, or local rules that may 
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the interim rule?
    We will also submit the rule for peer review concurrent with public 
comments. In conducting peer review, we will follow guidance from the 
Office of Management and Budget ``Final Information Quality Bulletin 
for Peer Review'' (OMB 2004) and the Service's own guidance.

Species Information for Salamanders

Salamander Nomenclature and Taxonomy

    Salamander nomenclature and taxonomy remained relatively unchanged 
from the 1960s until the 1990s, when advances in DNA sequencing enabled 
researchers to examine species relationships more closely (Petranka 
1998). The Service does not have a uniform policy for taxonomically 
identifying amphibians. In this interim rule, we use taxonomic 
nomenclature as described by AmphibiaWeb (http://amphibiaweb.org) and 
the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) (http://www.itis.gov). The system used by AmphibiaWeb represents one of the 
most widely accepted salamander taxonomic systems in the scientific 
community because it relies on criteria including, but not limited to, 
monophyly (common descent from a single ancestor), stability, expertise 
of scientists, and general acceptance by the amphibian community 
(Amphibiaweb 2015b). As a Federal resource for taxonomic information, 
the Service also uses ITIS as an agency resource (ITIS 2015).
    The two databases have some differences. For example, AmphibiaWeb 
contains some species that are not in ITIS. We addressed all species 
found in either ITIS or AmphibiaWeb for a given genus to avoid 
confusion over which species we intended to list by this interim rule. 
We have also used additional resources where necessary to clarify 
taxonomy, specifically:
     The Kurdistan newt (Neurergus microspilotus) is in ITIS 
but is not in AmphibiaWeb. According to the American Museum of Natural 
History (AMNH 2015a), it is likely the same species as N. derjugini; 
consequently, we have included both scientific names in 50 CFR 16.14.
     Martel et al. (2014) identified the great crested newt 
(Triturus cristatus) as being lethally vulnerable to Bsal. Another 
species in the genus, T. vittatus (no common name), appears in the U.S. 
Fish and Wildlife Service's Office of Law Enforcement's (USFWS OLE) Law 
Enforcement Management Information System (LEMIS) data (USFWS OLE 
2015). LEMIS is an electronic database utilized by all Service law 
enforcement offices, including Service Conservation Officers, Wildlife 
Inspectors, Refuge Officers, and Special Agents. LEMIS serves as the 
portal in which all Service wildlife violations are documented and 
intelligence is gathered and shared between law enforcement offices 
across the country. LEMIS also serves as the conduit for all declared 
(lawful) imports and exports of wildlife and wildlife products and the 
database of all wildlife trade data in the United States, both legal 
and illegal. T. vittatus does not appear in ITIS or AmphibiaWeb but is 
listed in AMNH (2015b). Because it appears in LEMIS data, we are 
including it in 50 CFR 16.14 as a species under the same genus, even 
though that species does not appear in either ITIS or AmphibiaWeb.
     LEMIS also includes the species Triturus hongkongensis (no 
common name), even though it is not a valid scientific name in ITIS or 
AmphibiaWeb. The name may be confused with Paramesotriton hongkongensis 
(no common name) due to its similarity.
     As a result, even though sources such as AmphibiaWeb state 
that there are approximately 679 species of salamanders (AmphibiaWeb 
2015c), for purposes of this interim rule, we have identified 
approximately 681 species.
     Hynobius fuca and H. fucus appear to be the same species 
(Taiwan lesser salamander) (AMNH 2015c); we have included both of these 
names in 50 CFR 16.14.
     Speleomantes strinatii is a synonym for Hydromantes 
strinatii (Nanjappa, pers. comm.; Caudata Culture 2015b), of which the 
French cave salamander or Strinati's cave salamander are common names; 
we have included all of these names in 50 CFR 16.14.
    In this interim rule, when we refer to salamanders, we include a 
variety of animals from the order Caudata, including those commonly 
referred to as salamanders and newts. Other common names, such as 
mudpuppy, also exist for certain animals in Caudata.

Salamander Biology

    Salamanders belong to the class Amphibia, a group of cold-blooded 
animals with a spinal column. The word ``amphibian'' is derived from 
the fact that most of the species spend part of their lives in water 
and part on land. The class Amphibia also includes frogs

[[Page 1540]]

and toads, which have legs but no tails as adults, and caecilians, 
which have tails but no legs. Morphologically, salamanders are 
characterized by their relatively large, vertically flattened tails, 
two front and two hind legs that are approximately the same size 
(Petranka 1998), and skin with glands that can be either rough or 
smooth (Stebbins and Cohen 1997). Salamanders range in length from 
around 4 centimeters (1.5 inches) to over 1.5 meters (5 feet) (Stebbins 
and Cohen 1997).
    Salamanders can live for long periods, but documented lifespans 
vary. Larger salamanders tend to live longer than smaller ones, and 
with proper care, salamanders in captivity frequently live longer than 
those in the wild (Duellman and Trueb 1986). Records for captive 
animals range from 5 years for most plethodontids to 55 years for the 
Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus) (Duellman and Trueb 
1986). The Olm or blind cave salamander (Proteus anguinus), which lives 
in caves in southern Europe, has been documented living for at least 48 
years in the wild, with an estimated lifespan of more than 100 years 
(Live Science 2015).
    Salamanders are carnivorous and eat a wide variety of prey, 
depending on habitat and the stage of their life cycle. Terrestrial 
salamanders eat earthworms, insect eggs, and other small invertebrates, 
while aquatic salamanders eat all of these in addition to small fish, 
aquatic insects, and other amphibians. Some salamander larvae can also 
be omnivorous and eat both plants and animals.
    Many salamanders have unique structural features, including costal 
grooves (grooves on the sides of the body that increase skin surface 
area for water absorption and transport) and nasolabial grooves 
(vertical slits between the nostril and upper lip used for sensing 
chemical stimuli in the environment), that can be used to differentiate 
between salamander species (Petranka 1998). Important features for 
identifying salamanders include head shape and size, fin shape and 
color, gill morphology, color patterns, number of toes, size, body 
shape, tooth patterns, and number of costal grooves. Some species 
appear similar. For example, similarity of appearance within the family 
Salamandridae can make it difficult to differentiate between species, 
requiring close inspection of small physical characteristics.
    Salamanders occupy a wide range of habitats, including streams, 
trees, land (including forests, grasslands, and rocky slopes), 
underground, and caves (Amphibiaweb 2015a). Salamanders are cryptic 
(difficult to find) partly because they occupy moist, cool places, such 
as underneath logs and between rock crevices on land or under rocks and 
logs in the water.
    Salamander courtship between males and females is regulated by 
chemicals that are released from specialized glands in the skin. Most 
salamanders reproduce by laying eggs in water with two exceptions: 
members of family Plethodontidae lay their eggs on land, and the 
European species known as the alpine salamander (Salamandra atra) gives 
birth to live young (Stebbins and Cohen 1997). Eggs are surrounded by a 
protective jelly or membrane that keeps them from drying out. Almost 
all species of salamanders breed during specific seasons, and the 
length of time between mating and egg-laying varies considerably 
between species (Petranka 1998). Species that lay aquatic eggs place 
them in either streams or ponds, and species that lay their eggs on 
land choose hidden places, such as underground burrows, decaying logs, 
and moist rock crevices (Petranka 1998).
    One example of a species that spends most of its life on land, but 
that moves to aquatic areas to breed, is the California tiger 
salamander (Ambystoma californiense). During winter rains, this species 
migrates across land to aquatic pools, such as cattle tanks and 
ephemeral pools, for breeding purposes. At the breeding pools, 
individuals come in contact with each other, even though they may not 
come in contact with each other during most of the rest of their lives 
on land (Barry and Shaffer 1994).

Habitat Conditions and Native Range of U.S. Salamanders

    With more native salamander species than any other country in the 
world, the United States is a salamander diversity hotspot (Partners in 
Amphibian and Reptile Conservation 2015; Stein and Kutner 2015). 
Salamanders are widespread in the United States. (Caudata Culture 
2015a; U.S. National Park Service 2015). Areas of particularly high 
salamander diversity include the southeastern United States, with large 
numbers of plethodontid salamanders in the southern Appalachian 
Mountains (Richgels et al. in review).
    Salamanders in the United States occupy a wide range of habitats, 
including streams, trees, land (including forests, grasslands, and 
rocky slopes), underground, and caves (Amphibiaweb 2015a). These 
locations are most conducive to the relatively cool, moist conditions 
under which both salamanders and Bsal thrive (Duellman and Trueb 1986; 
Piotrowski et al. 2004; Blooi et al. 2015a). Central and North American 
salamanders as a group are active at average temperatures of 11 [deg]C 
(52 [deg]F) to 20 [deg]C (68 [deg]F) (Duellman and Trueb 1986), fully 
encompassing the optimum temperature for Bsal growth as described below 
under Climate Tolerance. Most salamanders require some amount of 
constant moisture, either for respiration, as in the lungless family 
Plethodontidae, or for temperature regulation (Duellman and Trueb 
1986).
    Twenty species, subspecies, or populations of U.S. salamanders from 
six genera are currently listed as endangered or threatened under the 
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) 
(ESA). An additional three species (three genera) are candidates for 
listing (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 2015). The specific 
vulnerability and carrier status of these species to Bsal is described 
below in Vulnerability and Carrier Status of Threatened and Endangered 
Species.
    Of the 190 salamander species native to the United States, we find 
that at least 67 species in 5 genera and in 3 families are capable of 
being carriers of Bsal: Salamandridae, Sirenidae, and Plethodontidae. 
In North America, species in the family Salamandridae occur on the west 
coast of the United States and Canada from southern California to 
southeastern Alaska, and much of the eastern half of the United States 
and extreme southeastern Canada (Amphibiaweb 2015a; Caudata Culture 
2015a). Members of the family Sirendidae occur throughout the 
southeastern Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coastal plains and the 
Mississippi River Valley (Leja 2005) (lesser siren (Siren intermedia)) 
and in the Atlantic coastal plains from south Florida to Virginia 
(greater siren (Siren lacertina)) (Hendricks 2005). The distribution of 
salamanders of the family Plethodontidae in the western hemisphere is 
from southern Canada to Bolivia and Brazil, except for members of the 
genus Hydromantes, which occur in California (Amphibiaweb 2015a, 
Caudata Culture 2015a).

Role of Salamanders in the Ecosystem

    Salamanders play important roles in ecosystem function and as 
indicators of ecosystem health and stability (Davic and Welsh 2004). 
For example, salamanders of family Plethodontidae have life-history 
characteristics that make them exceptional indicators of forest health 
(Welsh and Droege 2001).
    In forests, salamanders are also among the most abundant 
vertebrates. Despite the relatively small size of most

[[Page 1541]]

salamanders compared to most other native vertebrates, this sheer 
abundance contributes to a significant amount of biomass in the 
ecosystem, and, therefore, salamanders make significant contributions 
to nutrient cycling and transport (Burton and Likens 1975). For 
example, Ambystomatid salamanders can make significant contributions to 
energy and nutrient transport in forest ecosystems (Regester et al. 
2006) and in pond ecosystems (Holomuzki et al. 1994). By consuming 
arthropods (insects and related invertebrates) that would otherwise 
release carbon dioxide into the atmosphere by decomposing leaf litter 
in forests, salamanders reduce carbon emissions from leaf litter 
decomposition, which has implications for the global carbon cycle 
(Wyman 1998; Best and Welsh 2014). Salamanders that live underground 
also contribute to soil dynamics by creating, modifying, and otherwise 
regulating the systems of underground burrows in which they live (Davic 
and Welsh 2004).
    In vernal pond communities, Ambystoma species are the top predators 
and, therefore, control the abundance of aquatic invertebrates and 
other amphibians (Petranka 1998). The high numbers of many amphibians, 
including salamanders, in some ecosystems also provide a substantial 
source of prey for other vertebrates in the ecosystem (Harper et al. 
2008; Davic and Welsh 2004); therefore, other native species that prey 
on salamanders can also be affected by disease-related declines.

Species Information for Bsal

General Description of Chytrid Fungus

    In drawing some of our conclusions about the effects of Bsal on 
U.S. wildlife and wildlife resources, the Service has used Bd as a 
surrogate. Considerably more is known about Bd than Bsal due to its 
discovery and description more than 15 years ago (Berger et al. 1998, 
Longcore et al. 1999), while Bsal was discovered 2 years ago (Martel et 
al. 2013). The severe effects that Bd, a species closely related to 
Bsal, has had on amphibian populations, has raised additional alarm 
about the expected consequences of a Bsal introduction and the need to 
take immediate action under an interim rule. The two risk assessments 
of Bsal that have been conducted both used Bd in determining the risk 
of Bsal based on transmission, spread, and population-level effects 
(Richgels et al. in review; Stephen et al. 2015).
    Until Bsal was discovered, the fungal disease chytridiomycosis was 
thought to be caused by a single species of pathogenic fungus, Bd, 
which was the only chytridiomycete taxon known to parasitize vertebrate 
hosts (Longcore 1999; Johnson and Speare 2003). Bd has been implicated 
in the decline and extinction of amphibian species at the global scale 
(Berger et al. 1998; Daszak et al. 2003; Lips et al. 2006; Walker et 
al. 2008; Vredenburg et al. 2010; Cheng et al. 2011). Bd has been found 
on every continent except Antarctica, and it is known to have affected 
more than 500 species of amphibians, including all orders of amphibians 
(frogs, salamanders, and caecilians) worldwide (Chytridcrisis 2015a; 
Fisher et al. 2009; Olson et al. 2013).
    Bsal came to the attention of the scientific community only 
recently. Spitzen-van der Sluijs et al. (2013) observed a 96 percent 
decline in fire salamanders (Salamandra salamandra) in the Netherlands 
but was ``unable to attribute this to any known cause of amphibian 
decline, such as chytridiomycosis [at the time, thought only to be 
caused by Bd], ranavirus or habitat degradation.'' Martel et al. (2013) 
later identified the cause of the salamander decline in the Netherlands 
as a newly described species of fungus now known as Bsal. Their work 
confirmed that Bsal is related to Bd and is also capable of causing 
chytridiomycosis. Analysis of a broad range of representative chytrid 
fungi show that Bsal represents a previously undescribed species that 
shares early evolutionary origins with the pathogenic fungus Bd (Martel 
et al. 2013). Until Bsal was discovered, Bd was the only species from 
that phylum known to infect vertebrates.
    While Bd has been found in North America, Bsal has not yet been 
found in North America, and the two fungi do not have the same effects 
on the same animals. As the authors noted, ``Chytridiomycosis has 
resulted in the serious decline and extinction of [more than] 200 
species of amphibians worldwide and poses the greatest threat to 
biodiversity of any known disease * * *. We [have discovered] a second 
* * * chytrid pathogen, [Bsal], that causes lethal skin infections in 
salamanders * * *. Our finding provides another explanation for the 
phenomenon of amphibian biodiversity loss that is emblematic of the 
current global biodiversity crisis.'' The natural host ranges of Bsal 
remain unknown, but so far it has been found only in salamanders and 
appears capable of causing lethal chytridiomycosis only in salamanders 
(Martel et al. 2014).

How the Fungus Affects Salamanders

    The ``salamandrivorans'' in Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans 
translates to ``salamandereating'' and accurately describes the effects 
of the fungus on salamanders. Bsal infects the skin of amphibians but 
not deeper tissues or internal organs (Berger 2004; Martel et al. 
2013). The cells of the fungus (thalli) embed themselves in the skin 
cells of the salamander, thereby causing erosive lesions.
    Lesions consist of sores on the skin that erode and ulcerate, with 
secondary bacterial infection occurring after the sores appear (Martel 
et al. 2013), although many of the salamanders reported at the 
beginning of the European Bsal outbreak seemed to lack obvious external 
lesions (Spitzen-van der Sluijs et al. 2013). Experimental infections 
of fire salamanders in the laboratory caused death 12 to 18 days after 
exposure, with the same clinical signs and pathological lesions found 
in the European outbreak (Martel et al. 2013). Martel et al. (2013) 
found that infected fire salamanders developed shallow skin lesions and 
deep ulcerations all over the body, and became anorexic, apathetic, and 
suffered from neurological signs including a loss of voluntary movement 
and muscle coordination. Death occurred within 7 days of clinical signs 
first appearing in species with lethal vulnerability.
    Bsal does not appear to affect reproductive tissue, such as eggs or 
gametes. Using Bd for comparison, Bd requires keratin, a structural 
component of organisms found in amphibian skin, which is not found in 
salamander eggs or gametes (Berger 1998).

Climate Tolerance

    Temperature has a significant impact on the growth and disease 
development of Bsal in salamanders (Martel et al. 2014). Bsal appears 
to prefer a temperature range for growth and infection of 10-15 [deg]C 
(50-59 [deg]F) (Blooi et al. 2015a; Stephen et al. 2015, Martel et al. 
2013). Bsal has shown some growth in temperatures as low as 5 [deg]C 
(41 [deg]F) and dies at 25 [deg]C (77 [deg]F) and above (Martel et al. 
2013). In a laboratory study, salamanders were most easily infected by 
Bsal at temperatures of 15 [deg]C (59 [deg]F) and 20 [deg]C (68 
[deg]F), while Bsal growth was inhibited at 25 [deg]C (77 [deg]F) 
(Blooi et al. 2015a). The same temperature response was also observed 
for Bsal raised in culture (Blooi et al. 2015a).
    This experimental data suggests that salamanders living at lower 
temperatures are more at risk to

[[Page 1542]]

infection by Bsal. Animals that survive at temperatures above the 
optimal range for fungal growth are likely to be at reduced risk to 
infection. However, the average temperature ranges of North and Central 
American salamander species is from 11 [deg]C (52 [deg]F) to 20 [deg]C 
(68 [deg]F) (Duellman and Trueb 1986; the citation does not separate 
North and Central American data), so salamanders regularly reaching 25 
[deg]C (77 [deg]F) in the natural environment is uncommon. Bales et al. 
(2015) noted that the native salamander species, and by extension 
ecosystems, most at risk from a Bsal introduction would likely be those 
that occupy similar thermal ranges as the European fire salamander 
(Bales et al. 2015).

Ecology and Habitat Preferences

    The chytrid fungus Bd can live outside of a host and requires water 
to disperse because it reproduces asexually by forming motile 
zoospores; preliminary studies of Bsal indicate that similar modes of 
survival and transmission are highly likely (Longcore 1999; Martel et 
al. 2013). As the threat assessment by Stephen et al. 2015) noted, ``Bd 
is known to remain viable for several days to weeks in water (Johnson 
and Speare 2013) and moist organic matter (Johnson and Speare 2003), 
even in the absence of nutrients. It is likely that Bsal can also 
survive in moist environments, independent of an amphibian host.''

Environmental Conditions Needed To Survive

    The transmission and ecology of Bsal in the wild is likely to be 
similar to Bd based on the close taxonomic relationship between the 
species, their structural similarities, and their comparable 
pathophysiology (Martel et al. 2013, Stephen et al. (2015). Johnson and 
Speare (2003) reported that Bd can survive in tap water and deionized 
water for up to 3 and 4 weeks, respectively, and up to 7 weeks in lake 
water. Bsal is also likely to survive in moist environments independent 
of an amphibian host. While we do not have information on the response 
of Bsal to desiccation, Bd is highly impacted by drying and can survive 
desiccation for no more than 1 hour in the laboratory (Garmyn et al. 
2012); Bsal would likely respond in a similar way. Bsal appears to be 
adapted to temperatures and humidity conditions most conducive to 
salamander survival, thus supporting the hypothesis that the pathogen 
co-evolved with salamanders in the part of the world from which it is 
endemic, most likely in Asia (Martel et al. 2014).

Population- and Ecosystem-Level Effects of Bsal

Population-Level Effects

    Several pathogens, including Bsal, Bd, ranaviruses, and Saprolegnia 
sp. (water molds), have caused significant population-level declines in 
a range of amphibian species, and disease is thought to be a major 
driver of global amphibian decline (Bosch et al. 2001; Martel et al. 
2013; Daszak et al. 2003). Disease poses a greater risk to small, 
isolated populations as well as those with decreased genetic diversity 
(Smith et al. 2008). Within the United States, diseases have been cited 
as contributing factors in the listing or recovery of several native 
amphibian species under the ESA. Examples include Bd in the Ozark 
hellbender (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis bishopi) (76 FR 61956, October 
6, 2011), an undiagnosed disease in Sonora tiger salamanders (Ambystoma 
tigrinum stebbinsi) (62 FR 665, January 6, 1997), and Bd in the 
mountain yellow-legged frog (Rana muscosa) (82 FR 24256, April 29, 
2014; Vredenburg et al. 2010).
    As noted above in General Description of Fungus, Bsal is the most 
recently discovered pathogen associated with population-level amphibian 
declines, including a 96 percent reduction in Dutch populations of the 
European fire salamander between 2010-2013 (Spitzen-van der Sluijs et 
al. 2013; Martel et al. 2013). Due to the overall sensitivity of 
amphibian populations to disease; a history of adverse, population-
level effects in native amphibians; a direct association between Bsal 
and the decline of at least one European salamander population; and the 
adverse effects of some native salamanders to Bsal under experimental 
conditions, we conclude that the introduction of Bsal into the United 
States would cause significant, adverse, population-level effects in a 
number of native species.

Ecosystem-Level Effects

    The preferred temperature range of Bsal can help predict those 
ecosystems that are at greatest risk should Bsal be introduced into the 
United States (Stephen et al. 2015). The native salamander species, and 
by extension ecosystems, most at risk from a Bsal introduction would 
likely be those that occupy similar thermal ranges as the European fire 
salamander (Bales et al. 2015).
    Salamanders are important parts of the ecosystems in which they 
occur. Salamanders are often the most abundant vertebrates in 
terrestrial forest and riparian (the banks of watercourses) ecosystems, 
where they may compose a total biomass greater than or equal to birds 
or small mammals (Davic and Welsh 2004). This means that, despite their 
small size, the total weight of all salamanders in a given area may be 
more than the combined total weight of all birds or all small mammals. 
Because of their abundance under normal circumstances, salamanders are 
important prey species themselves and are energy sources for higher 
predators (Davic and Welsh 2004), including fish, reptiles, birds, and 
mammals.
    Salamanders may be the dominant predator in headwater streams and 
ephemeral waterbodies where fish are absent (Davic and Welsh 2004). 
Within some food webs, salamanders are considered keystone predators 
due to their control of invertebrate prey populations and their 
resulting regulation of detritus decomposition and nutrient cycling 
(Davic and Welsh 2004). By definition, keystone species are those that 
occupy niches that affect ecosystems and have little functional overlap 
with other species (Davic and Welsh 2004). Therefore, loss of these 
keystone species would result in significant ecosystem-level change.
    In addition to their roles in food webs and nutrient cycling, 
salamanders participate in a number of interspecific (between species) 
ecological relationships. Salamander species interact with one another 
through competition and predation to control the composition of their 
assemblages (taxonomically related species that occur within the same 
geographic community) (Davic and Welsh 2004; Fauth et al. 1996). 
Frequently, a single species is dominant within a given assemblage, 
particularly in terrestrial habitats, but which species dominates 
varies by location and ecosystem (Davic and Welsh 2004). We find that 
ecosystems where the dominant salamander species is vulnerable to 
lethal or susceptible infections with Bsal would be at risk from an 
introduction of this pathogen.
    Salamanders also interact with invertebrate species in other 
ecologically important ways. Semi-aquatic salamander species can move 
mollusks and shrimp eggs between waterbodies during their migrations, 
allowing these invertebrates to inhabit new areas (Davic and Welsh 
2004). Additionally, one species of salamander, the mudpuppy (Necturus 
maculosus), is a required host for developing stages of the salamander 
mussel (Simpsonaias ambigua), a native, freshwater mollusk for which a 
positive 90-day finding has been made under the Endangered Species Act 
of

[[Page 1543]]

1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) (76 FR 59836; September 27, 
2011) (Davic and Welsh 2004; Gangloff and Folkerts 2006; United States 
Fish and Wildlife Service 2015b, United States Fish and Wildlife 
Service 2015c). We conclude that invertebrate species that depend on 
salamanders for aspects of their life cycle or ecology are likely to be 
adversely affected if their host species declines in response to a Bsal 
introduction.

Invasiveness of Salamanders and Bsal

Invasiveness of Salamanders

    Some salamanders have the ability to invade new environments in 
which they are not native. Globally, 90 percent of salamander 
introductions have occurred through intentional releases (Tingley et 
al. 2010). As of 2010, salamanders comprised 22 percent of all recorded 
amphibian introductions, with the highest number of salamander 
introductions (15) from the family Salamandridae, followed by 
salamanders from the families Ambystomatidae (4), Cryptobranchidae (2), 
and Proteidae (2) (Tingley et al. 2010).
    Nonnative salamander introductions have been documented in the 
United States. As described below under Likelihood of Release or 
Escape, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Nonindigenous 
Aquatic Species database has U.S. records for 14 salamander species 
that have been observed outside their native range. Of those, 11 are 
native to the United States but were discovered outside of their native 
ranges, and 3 (Japanese newt (also called the Japanese fire-bellied 
newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster), Oriental fire belly newt (also called the 
Oriental fire-bellied newt, Cynops orientalis), and the spotless stout 
newt (Pachytriton labiatus)) are exotic species from outside the United 
States (USGS 2015). In Florida, the Oriental fire belly newt and 
spotless stout newt, which are native to China (family Salamandridae), 
have been found in the wild near an animal importer's facility, either 
as the result of intentional releases or escapes from enclosures 
(Krysko et al. 2011).
    Other invasions have been attributed to the use and subsequent 
release of salamanders used as fishing bait. Surveys of anglers have 
indicated that they routinely release salamanders into the areas where 
they fish, which includes areas that are not part of the salamander's 
native U.S. habitats, suggesting that animals are routinely moved long 
distances (Picco and Collins 2008). Furthermore, Picco and Collins 
(2008) found that salamanders sold as bait were highly infected with 
both ranavirus and Bd, thereby increasing the likelihood of disease 
transmission into new areas of the United States through the act of 
fishing.

Invasiveness and Transmission of Bsal

    As noted above under General Description of Fungus, Europe has been 
experiencing a severe decline in wild fire salamander populations in 
the Netherlands (Spitzen-van der Sluijs et al. 2013). This decline is 
so significant that fire salamander populations are facing local 
extinction in the Netherlands, though other populations throughout 
Europe appear to be stable (AmphibiaWeb 2015c). A sharp decline in 
numbers has been observed since 2010, despite the species being listed 
as endangered on the Netherlands Red List, and at population levels 
that were thought to be stable. This enigmatic decline was not 
attributed to any known cause of amphibian decline, such as 
chytridiomycosis due to Bd, ranavirus, or habitat degradation. In late 
2013, Bsal was isolated from infected fire salamanders in the 
Netherlands (Martel et al. 2013).
    Martel et al. (2014) later established the highly pathogenic nature 
of this new chytrid fungus. Molecular testing found Bsal in specimens 
collected from the wild (though none from North America) and even in an 
archival (museum) sample that was 150 years old (Martel et al. 2014). A 
wide variety of salamanders are negatively affected by the pathogen, 
but frogs, toads, and caecilians do not appear to be (Martel et al. 
2014). The pathogenic nature of the fungus and its ability to infect a 
wide variety of salamanders, as described below in Classification and 
Status as Carriers, definitively demonstrate an invasive threat to 
salamanders in the United States.
    In Bd, the ability of the pathogen to be transmitted between 
individuals is dependent upon the density of populations (Rachowicz and 
Briggs 2007) and the presence of a vector that can carry the disease to 
uninfected populations (Greenspan et al. 2012); we expect the same for 
Bsal. Experiments have shown that Bsal can be transmitted from one 
species to another when the species come into contact (Martel et al. 
2014).
    Salamanders that breed in ponds and temporary wetlands are often 
explosive breeders, meaning that hundreds to multiple thousands of 
individuals will reproduce at the same time (Gill 1978), creating dense 
numbers of individuals and increasing opportunities for the pathogen to 
spread. Pathogens are also likely to be transmitted by salamander 
species that travel long distances for breeding and dispersal 
migrations, such as those that exhibit a metapopulation structure 
(Bancroft et al. 2011). A metapopulation is a group of discrete 
breeding populations of the same species (Gill 1978). For example, 
within salamander metapopulations, California tiger salamanders 
(Ambystoma californiense) have been documented traveling up to 1.2 
miles (1.9 kilometers) from upland habitat to aquatic breeding sites 
(USFWS 2000), and newts travel many kilometers to breeding sites (Gill 
1978).
    Salamander species that have abundant populations with widespread 
distributions can also contribute to the spread of Bsal because of the 
increased likelihood that they will come in close contact with other 
salamanders that could then become infected. Salamanders that can carry 
Bsal from one place to another are more likely to do so if they have a 
broad range where they will come in contact with other members of the 
same species (for abundant distributions) or other species (for 
widespread distributions). Species with broad distributions are adapted 
to a wide range of environmental conditions that are more likely to 
overlap with habitat suitable for Bsal as well as habitat suitable for 
that species, providing increased opportunities for Bsal to spread.
    For example, the rough-skinned newt (Taricha granulosa) has a wide 
range along the West Coast from Alaska to California, and the eastern 
newt (Notophthalmus viridescens) ranges widely across the eastern 
United States, occurring in 34 States (Amphibiaweb 2015a). Both species 
have had lethal responses with laboratory infections of Bsal (Martel et 
al. 2014), and both are capable of carrying Bsal. In addition to its 
broad range, N. viridescens also migrates long distances; this species 
will frequently travel many kilometers to migrate to new ponds (Gill 
1978), further increasing the risk of this species spreading Bsal.

Pathway Analysis

Introduction Pathways

    The main pathway for the global spread of Bsal is the international 
trade in salamanders (Martel et al. 2014). The introduction of Bsal 
into mainland Europe is linked with the commercial trade of Asian 
salamanders (Cynops spp.) from East Asia, particularly Thailand, 
Vietnam, and Japan (Martel et al. 2014). As described above in How the 
Fungus Affects Salamanders, eggs and gametes are not expected to be 
pathways. However, salamanders that

[[Page 1544]]

have been identified as carriers, whether live or dead, are expected to 
transmit Bsal through their skin, which contains keratin. We are also 
concerned that any salamanders that are infected and lethally 
vulnerable may die in transport and continue to carry Bsal into the 
United States. As such, we also expect dead salamanders and body parts 
to be a pathway.
    Individual amphibians in trade are often transported in containers 
with many other individuals of the same species or with many other 
species that can all be from different sources. These conditions are 
highly conducive to pathogen transmission and dispersal. Pathogens can 
transfer from host to host in crowded conditions, and crowded 
conditions create stress on animals that can reduce amphibian hosts' 
natural ability to ward off infections (Rowley et al. 2007, Rachowicz 
et al. 2005, Rollins-Smith et al. 2011).
    Bsal can also be introduced into the environment through the 
improper disposal of contaminated water or other materials used to 
transport salamanders. As described above under Environmental 
Conditions Needed to Survive, the fungus can likely persist in such 
materials independent of whether a salamander is present. Water and 
other materials have served as fomites to introduce other similar 
pathogens into the environment. For example, Bd has been found in water 
used to transport amphibians that were traded in Hong Kong (Kolby et 
al. 2014). As the authors noted, ``[T]he abundance of aquatic amphibian 
species traded by Hong Kong . . ., prolonged environmental persistence 
of infectious . . . Bd particles, and employment of trade activities 
that neither disinfect water nor safely dispose of deceased animals 
creates an ideal pathway for disease transmission to native Hong Kong 
amphibians.''
    Drawing on this evidence, the primary pathway for the entry of 
salamanders that are hosts of Bsal into the United States is through 
the international commercial wildlife trade. Overall, 99.9 percent of 
salamander importation into the United States is for commercial 
purposes (USFWS OLE 2015). From 2010 to 2014, salamanders were imported 
through 14 ports of entry into the United States; the 3 ports of entry 
with the largest numbers of imported salamanders were Los Angeles 
(California), Tampa (Florida), and New York (New York) (Richgels et al. 
in review). After import, many of the salamanders are transported to 
animal wholesalers, who then transport the salamanders to pet 
retailers.
    The most likely pathway of a salamander that is a host to Bsal into 
the United States would include a pet store or online retailer. 
Individuals would purchase the salamander from a pet store (or online 
retailer) and keep it in captivity as a pet. Many amphibians and 
reptiles first kept as pets are released by their owners into the wild 
either intentionally or accidentally (Kraus 2009, Krysko et al. 2011). 
For example, owners may no longer be able to care for their pets or an 
animal may escape its enclosure. In addition to the risk from a release 
of an infected pet salamander into the wild, the water that is used to 
house an infected pet in captivity would feasibly contain Bsal 
zoospores. As a result, the discharge of untreated water used to house 
infected, captive animals could be a pathway for releasing infective 
zoospores into the environment and exposing native salamanders to Bsal 
(Stephen et al. 2015).

International Trade in Salamanders

    Trade in wildlife occurs on a global scale, and amphibians are one 
of the most commonly traded animals (Smith et al. 2009). More than 
52,149,000 documented amphibians were imported into the United States 
from 2004 to 2014, based on the Service's LEMIS data (USFWS OLE 2015). 
Salamanders comprised 2,504,590 (4.8 percent) of the total imports of 
amphibians (USFWS OLE 2015). The 2004 to 2014 LEMIS dataset should be 
considered as a conservative estimate because many import records 
identified the animal being imported only as a member of the Class 
Amphibia (rather than identifying it to species or genus level). In 
addition, incorrect salamander identifications to genus and species 
level appear to have commonly occurred in reporting to LEMIS (USFWS OLE 
2015). LEMIS data shows that 65 percent of imported salamanders came 
from captive sources and 35 percent were from wild sources (USFWS OLE 
2015). The LEMIS data recorded only 83 percent of declared imports at 
the species level, whereas 17 percent were recorded to the genus level 
(USFWS OLE 2015).
    The four salamander genera most commonly imported into the United 
States from 2004 to 2014 were Cynops, Paramesotriton, Triturus, and 
Pachytriton (USFWS OLE 2015). Cynops, Triturus, and Paramesotriton are 
three genera that can serve as carriers for Bsal (Martel et al. 2014). 
Of the 20 genera listed by this interim rule, 15 have been traded over 
the 11 years. Salamanders that can carry Bsal have comprised 95 percent 
of imported salamanders.
    The species with the highest number of imports into the United 
States from 2004 to 2014 was the Oriental fire belly newt; this species 
comprised 54 percent of the total number of imported salamanders (USFWS 
OLE 2015). Twelve species of salamanders that are native to the United 
States were also imported into the United States from other countries 
from 2004 through 2014 (USFWS OLE 2015).

Risk Assessments and Salamander Effects From Bsal

Bsal Risk Assessments

    Two Bsal risk assessments are available to help determine the risk 
associated with Bsal introduction into North America. The USGS 
conducted a risk assessment for the United States that helped us 
determine the level of risk associated with Bsal introduction (Richgels 
et al. in review). Stephen et al. (2015) also conducted a Bsal risk 
assessment for Canada that showed Canada is also at risk.
    The USGS risk assessment concludes that the potential for Bsal 
introduction into the United States is high, the United States has 
suitable conditions for Bsal survival, and the consequences of 
introduction into the United States are expected to be severe and occur 
across a wide range of the United States (Richgels et al. in review). 
To evaluate the potential for Bsal introduction, the USGS assessment 
combined information on the number of individual salamanders imported 
at each port of entry and the number of pet supply establishments by 
county. Based on this evaluation, Bsal introduction potential was 
highest in central and southern Florida, southern California, and near 
New York City, New York (Richgels et al. in review).
    To determine the consequences of Bsal introduction into the United 
States, the USGS risk assessment evaluated environmental suitability, 
species richness, and predicted species susceptibility. Overall, the 
total risk of Bsal to native salamanders is high. Based on both likely 
introduction and resultant consequences, the risk of Bsal is the 
highest for the Pacific coast, southern Appalachian Mountains, and mid-
Atlantic regions (Richgels et al. in review). The areas most likely to 
have consequences from Bsal introduction are the Pacific Coast and 
Appalachian Mountains (Richgels et al. in review). Based on 
environmental suitability, areas of the United States most suited to 
Bsal growth (Blooi et al. 2015a), including the Southwest, Southeast, 
and Pacific regions, are also the areas of highest salamander diversity 
(Richgels

[[Page 1545]]

et al. in review). Yap et al. (2015) also identified the southeastern 
and western United States as zones of high risk.
    Some species may be protected from Bsal by temperatures in their 
regions that are outside of the Bsal optimal growth range (Richgels et 
al. in review), but the average temperature preferences of salamanders 
from Central and North America (Duellman and Trueb 1986), which range 
from -2.0 [deg]C (28.4 [deg]F) to 30.0 [deg]C (86.0 [deg]F), suggest 
that most salamander species, including those within the United States, 
are active near the thermal growth optimum for Bsal (Blooi et al. 
2015a). Most U.S. salamander species are also dependent upon forests, a 
habitat type dominated by relatively cool, moist conditions, for the 
majority of their life cycle (Davic and Welsh 2004).

Vulnerability and Carrier Status

    The urgent need to prevent Bsal introduction risks was raised by 
evidence presented by Martel et al. (2014), who tested Bsal on 35 
species from all three orders of amphibians: frogs, salamanders, and 
caecilians. Martel et al. (2014) further screened 5,391 specimens 
collected from 4 continents for evidence of Bsal infection.
    Martel et al. (2014) defines a ``resistant'' salamander as one that 
either was not infected or developed a short-term infection without 
clinical signs following exposure to Bsal; a ``tolerant'' salamander is 
one that maintains a more prolonged infection with no signs of disease; 
a ``susceptible'' salamander becomes infected and has clinical signs of 
disease with the possibility of subsequent recovery; and a salamander 
that responds in a ``lethal'' manner to Bsal dies as a result of 
infection. According to Martel et al. (2014), resistant salamanders are 
not a risk for transmitting Bsal. However, based on the available 
scientific data, we concluded that resistant species with evidence of 
short-term infection, as well as those reported to have tolerant, 
susceptible, or lethal responses to Bsal, are ``carriers'' capable of 
transmitting Bsal to other salamanders and introducing the fungus into 
the United States. The Service finds that a species is considered to be 
a ``non-carrier'' when Martel et al. (2014) classified the species as 
``resistant'' and no histologic or field surveillance data was found to 
suggest that short-term Bsal infection could occur; ``non-carriers'' 
are considered incapable of transmitting Bsal to other salamanders or 
introducing the fungus into the United States.
    We also find the likelihood of a species within the same genus 
being a carrier can be drawn from a comparison to Bd, which as 
described above under General Description of Chytrid Fungus is a close 
relative of Bsal. As noted earlier, the two risk assessments of Bsal 
that have been conducted both used Bd in determining the risk of Bsal 
based on transmission, spread, and population-level effects (Richgels 
et al. in review; Stephen et al. 2015). Considerably more is known 
about Bd than Bsal due to its discovery and description more than 15 
years ago (Berger et al. 1998; Longcore et al. 1999), while Bsal was 
discovered only 2 years ago (Martel et al. 2013). Bd has caused 
amphibian declines and extinctions worldwide (Skerratt et al. 2007). Bd 
affects species in patterns (Skerratt et al. 2007), and more closely 
related species have similar outcomes for Bd at the family level (Smith 
et al. 2009; Bancroft et al. 2011). Amphibians experiencing the most 
severe declines are grouped by relatedness, which is likely due to the 
shared evolutionary histories of closely related species with a similar 
response to chytridiomycosis (Corey and Waite 2008). The U.S. 
Department of Agriculture (USDA) uses a similar approach. Closely 
related species are considered more likely to have similar traits and 
are used in risk assessments to determine threats from a target species 
of interest; a potential pest is regarded as a threat when other 
species in a genus pose a similar threat (Wapshere 1974; Gilbert et al. 
2012).
    We find that, due to shared characteristics by species within a 
genus, other species within these genera are also highly likely to be 
carriers of Bsal if one species has been identified as a carrier, even 
if not every species in the genus has been tested to verify that it is 
a carrier of Bsal. Our analysis found no conclusive countervailing 
evidence that species differed within a genus with respect to their 
ability to act as carriers. As such, we expect all species in a genus 
to respond similarly as carriers or non-carriers to Bsal. Therefore, 
based on existing scientific evidence, and as described in more detail 
below, we are listing all species in the 20 genera, including 201 known 
species, that we now conclude constitute a threat to introducing and 
spreading Bsal in the United States because such species can carry the 
fungus and transmit it to other species which would be negatively 
impacted.
    While frogs and caecilians showed resistance to Bsal, many 
salamanders exhibited a strong, adverse response to Bsal infection; 
many species from outside of the native range of the fungus (Asia) 
exhibited lethal vulnerability. Our analysis of Martel et al. (2014) 
and follow-up communication (Martel, pers. comm.) found 25 species from 
19 genera are carriers of Bsal. Additional communications 
(Chytridcrisis 2015b; Cunningham et al. 2015; Nanjappa, pers. comm.) 
identified another two species from two separate genera as carriers: 
The pygmy marbled newt (Triturus pygmaeus) and the golden striped 
salamander (Chioglossa lusitanica). Because Martel et al. (2014) had 
previously identified members of the Triturus genus as carriers, it is 
already accounted for within the 19 genera. The addition of this 
species brings the total number of known carrier species to 26. In 
addition to Triturus, Chioglossa was identified as another genus 
capable of serving as a carrier by Chytridcrisis (2015b), Cunningham et 
al. (2015), and Nanjappa (pers. comm.). As a result, the total number 
of species known to serve as carriers of Bsal is 27 from 20 genera. 
These 20 genera include the following: Chioglossa, Cynops, Euproctus, 
Hydromantes, Hynobius, Ichthyosaura, Lissotriton, Neurergus, 
Notophthalmus, Onychodactylus, Paramesotriton, Plethodon, Pleurodeles, 
Salamandra, Salamandrella, Salamandrina, Siren, Taricha, Triturus, and 
Tylototriton.
    In conducting its analysis, the Service initially focused on 
identifying species for listing as injurious that scientific evidence 
demonstrates are capable of carrying Bsal. As we described above, 
however, we find that, due to shared characteristics by species within 
a genus, other species within these genera are also highly likely to be 
carriers of Bsal, even if not every species in the genus has been 
tested to verify that it is a carrier of Bsal. This conclusion is 
because more closely related species, such as those found within the 
same genus, share common traits. Our analysis found no conclusive 
evidence to the contrary that suggested that all species within such 
genera are not carriers.
    We have focused our findings on salamanders and the genera in which 
they are found that we concluded are capable of carrying Bsal, and we 
are not listing genera that Martel et al. (2014) identified are not 
carriers of Bsal: Based on our analysis of their data, such salamanders 
are not capable of introducing Bsal to the United States or otherwise 
transmitting Bsal to native populations. In addition, we are not 
listing genera at this time where there is no data because we do not 
have a basis for doing so, even though the Service recognizes that it 
is possible that untested genera may also be capable of carrying Bsal. 
Likewise, we are not listing hybrids derived from species consisting of 
a listed genera and an

[[Page 1546]]

unlisted one because we do not know their status as carriers. However, 
consistent with our view that species within a genus are likely to be 
carriers of Bsal if one species within that genus has been identified 
as a carrier, hybrids consisting of two species from within the same 
genus are expected also to be carriers.
    In conclusion, we have decided to list all 201 species in the 20 
genera where at least one species has been positively identified as a 
carrier of Bsal and there is no countervailing conclusive evidence 
suggesting that some species within the genus are not carriers. Where 
one species has been identified as a carrier, we find that the other 
species in that genus are also carriers. This finding includes hybrids 
consisting of species found within the genus.
    In reaching this conclusion, it is worth noting that Martel et al. 
(2014) classified the slimy salamander (or northern slimy salamander, 
Plethodon glutinosus) as resistant to infection. Martel et al. (2014) 
demonstrated by histology, however, that Bsal could invade the skin of 
the slimy salamander, even though it was otherwise resistant through 
challenge testing and did not show signs of infection. Our examination 
of the supplementary data of Martel et al. (2014), including histology 
(microscopy) tests and subsequent discussions with the authors, 
indicate that there is sufficient evidence that Bsal was able to invade 
the skin of this species long enough to move or transmit the infection 
to other salamanders (Martel et al. 2014; Martel, pers. comm.; Lips, 
pers. comm.). Because we expect all species within a genus to respond 
in a similar way as a carrier or not of Bsal, we conclude that all 
species of Plethodon are carriers.
    Martel et al. (2014) also classified the palmate newt (Lissotriton 
helveticus) as resistant to infection even though the Italian newt 
(Lissotriton italicus) was identified as lethally vulnerable to Bsal. 
Martel conducted histological tests that showed the palmate newt could 
carry Bsal even though it demonstrated resistant vulnerability. Our 
examination of the data of Martel et al. (2014), as well as a personal 
communication from K. Lips (2015), indicates that there is sufficient 
evidence that Bsal was able to invade the skin of the palmate newt long 
enough to pass the infection to other salamanders. Because we expect 
all species within a genus to respond in a similar way as a carrier or 
not of Bsal, we also conclude that all species of Lissotriton are 
carriers.
    In addition, Martel et al. (2014) classified the Hokkaido 
salamander (Hynobius retardatus) as resistant to Bsal under 
experimental conditions. However, we find that the misty salamander (H. 
nebulosus) is a carrier based on detection of Bsal by Martel et al. 
(2014) in a free-ranging specimen from Japan. The histology tests that 
were conducted for the slimy salamander and the palmate newt, and which 
we used to find that these species are carriers, were not conducted for 
the Hokkaido salamander. Bsal's ability to invade the skin of the 
Hokkaido salamander remains unknown because histologic examination of 
the skin was not conducted for the species. Because the Hokkaido 
salamander was resistant in experimental tests but was not tested 
histologically to look for invasion in the skin, we find that the 
Hokkaido salamander has an inconclusive status as a carrier and base 
our finding of whether species from the genus Hynobius are carriers on 
results identified for the misty salamander (a carrier from the same 
genus). Because we expect all species within a genus to respond in a 
similar way as a carrier or not of Bsal, we concluded that all species 
from the genus Hynobius are also carriers.
    Finally, although Martel et al. (2014) did not test species from 
the genus Onychodactylus in the laboratory, Martel et al. (2014) 
observed Bsal on the Japanese clawed salamander (O. japonicas) in a 
free-ranging specimen from Japan. Based on that evidence, we concluded 
that this species is a carrier. Because we expect all species within a 
genus to respond in a similar way as a carrier or not of Bsal, we 
concluded that the other species in the genus Onychodactylus are also 
carriers.

Vulnerability and Carrier Status of Native Species

    There are 190 species of salamander in 23 genera native to the 
United States (AmphibiaWeb 2015b). Of the 201 salamander species that 
we conclude are carriers of Bsal (20 genera in 4 families), 67 species 
(5 genera in 3 families) are native to the United States. Of the 
remaining 123 species native to the United States, we found that 20 
species are not carriers and the vulnerability and carrier status of 
the remaining 103 species from the other 16 genera is unknown.
    We based our findings of the 67 native species on tests conducted 
by Martel et al. (2014), who tested 7 native species in the laboratory 
for Bsal vulnerability. The native species that Martel et al. (2014) 
tested were the eastern newt (Notophthalmus viridescens), rough-skinned 
newt (Taricha granulosa), lesser siren (Siren intermedia), slimy 
salamander (Plethodon glutinosus), spring salamander (Gyrinophilus 
porphyriticus), marbled salamander (Ambystoma opacum), and spotted 
salamander (A. maculatum). Of these, 2 species were found to be 
lethally affected, 1 was tolerant, and 4 were described as resistant, 
although additional evidence indicates that one of the resistant 
species is capable of transmitting the fungus, resulting in a positive 
carrier status. As we described above in Vulnerability and Carrier 
Status, although the Service found evidence that species within a genus 
may vary in their specific vulnerability (that is, lethal, susceptible, 
tolerant, or resistant, as defined in Martel et al. (2014)), we expect 
all species in a genus to respond similarly as carriers or non-carriers 
to Bsal due to the shared characteristics between species. Therefore, 
we are listing all species within a genus where at least one species in 
that genus has been identified as a carrier of Bsal.
    Based on the results of Martel et al. (2014), at least 2 native 
U.S. species, the eastern newt and rough-skinned newt, were found to be 
lethally vulnerable to Bsal. The French cave salamander (Hydromantes 
strinatii), which is not native to the United States, was also tested 
and identified as lethally vulnerable to Bsal (Martel et al. 2014). The 
Notophthalmus genus has two additional native species: The black-
spotted newt (N. meridionalis) and the striped newt (N. perstriatus). 
The Taricha genus has three additional native species: The red-bellied 
newt (T. rivularis), Sierra newt (T. sierra), and California newt (T. 
torosa). The Hydromantes genus has three native U.S. species: The 
limestone salamander (H. brunus), Mount Lyell salamander (H. 
platycephalus), and Shasta salamander (H. shastae).
    At least 1 native U.S. species from the Siren genus, the lesser 
siren, has a tolerant vulnerability (Martel et al. (2014). The genus 
has one additional native species: The greater siren (S. lacertina).
    Four native species have been identified as resistant by Martel et 
al. (2014), but we have concluded that one of these species is still 
capable of carrying Bsal. As we describe above in Vulnerability and 
Carrier Status, we conclude that the slimy salamander is resistant to 
sustained infection but it can serve as a short-term carrier of Bsal. 
The Plethodon genus has 54 other species, all of which are native to 
the United States (AmphibiaWeb 2015b), bringing the total number of 
native carrier species to 67.
    Three additional native salamander species were identified as 
resistant to

[[Page 1547]]

Bsal infection: The spring salamander (Gyrinophilus porphyriticus), 
marbled salamander (Ambystoma opacum), and spotted salamander (A. 
maculatum) (Martel et al. 2014). They are not expected to be carriers; 
therefore, we conclude that the 20 native U.S. species in their genera 
are not capable of carrying Bsal. This includes 4 species from the 
genus Gyrinophilus and 16 species from the genus Ambystoma (AmphibiaWeb 
2015b).
    Of the 190 native U.S. salamander species, carrier status has not 
been assessed in 103 species from 16 genera. The untested genera are 
Amphiuma, Aneides, Batrachoseps, Cryptobranchus, Desmognathus, 
Dicamptodon, Ensatina, Eurycea, Hemidactylium, Necturus, Phaeognathus, 
Pseudobranchus, Pseudotriton, Rhyacotriton, Stereochilus, and 
Urspelerpes (AmphibiaWeb 2015b). Although based on the gradient 
responses, from resisting infection to lethal response, among the 
genera Martel et al. (2014) tested experimentally, some of these 
additional species could be at risk from Bsal infection or could serve 
as a carrier, we are not listing species in those genera because these 
genera have not yet been tested.

Vulnerability and Carrier Status of Threatened and Endangered Species

    None of the salamander species listed as endangered or threatened 
under the ESA in the United States has been specifically tested for 
Bsal vulnerability under laboratory conditions; Bsal has not been 
detected in their wild populations (Martel et al. 2014, Bales et al. 
2015). However, several species from the same genera have been tested 
and on that basis identified as carriers. As we describe above in 
Vulnerability and Carrier Status, while the Service did find evidence 
that shows some species within a genus may vary in their specific 
vulnerability, the carrier status of tested species can be extrapolated 
to related species including those that are listed as endangered or 
threatened, are candidates for ESA listing, and under review.
    Of the genera that include native species that we have identified 
as carriers, the following species are federally listed as threatened 
or endangered: Jemez Mountains salamander (P. neomexicanus), Cheat 
Mountain salamander (P. netting), Shenandoah salamander (P. shenandoah) 
and, one species, the striped newt (Notophthalmus perstriatus) is a 
candidate species (USFWS 2015).
    Seven of the species, subspecies, or distinct population segments 
(DPSs) listed as federally endangered or threatened are classified 
within the Ambystoma genus, which we find is not a carrier of the 
fungus: Reticulated flatwoods salamander (A. bishopi), California tiger 
salamander (three DPSs), frosted flatwoods salamander (A. cingulatum), 
Santa Cruz long-toed salamander (A. macrodactylum croceum), and Sonora 
tiger salamander (Martel et al. 2014; USFWS 2015).
    No information is available regarding Bsal vulnerability or carrier 
status of the remaining 11 ESA-listed or candidate species or 
subspecies native to the United States: desert slender salamander 
(Batrachoseps aridus), Ozark hellbender, Salado salamander (Eurycea 
chisholmensis), San Marcos salamander (E. nana), Georgetown salamander 
(E. naufragia), Texas blind salamander (E. (Typhlomolge) rathbuni), 
Barton springs salamander (E. sosorum), Jollyville Plateau salamander 
(E. tonkawae), Austin blind salamander (E. waterlooensis), Berry Cave 
salamander (Gyrinophilus gulolineatus), and the Alabama waterdog 
(Necturus alabamensis).
    In addition to those species currently recognized as federally 
endangered, threatened, or candidates for listing under the ESA, 36 
species of native salamander from 16 genera are in various stages of 
review for possible ESA listing in the future (USFWS 2015). Of the 
genera that include native species that we have identified as carriers, 
the following species are currently under review for ESA listing: 
Limestone salamander (petitioned), Shasta salamander (petitioned), the 
black-spotted newt (positive 90-day finding completed), Cheoah bald 
salamander (P. cheoah, petitioned), Fourche Mountain salamander (P. 
fourchensis, petitioned), Peaks of Otter salamander (P. hubrichti, 
positive 90-day finding completed), South Mountain gray-cheeked 
salamander (P. meridianus, petitioned), and the white-spotted 
salamander (P. punctatus, petitioned) (Martel et al. 2014; USFWS 2015).
    Three species under ESA review are members of genera that are not 
carriers: (Streamside salamander (Ambystoma barbouri) (substantial 90-
day finding completed--76 FR 59836, September 27, 2011), Tennessee cave 
salamander (Gyrinophilus palleucus) (substantial 90-day finding 
completed--76 FR 59836, September 27, 2011), West Virginia spring 
salamander (G. subterraneus) (substantial 90-day finding completed--76 
FR 59836, September 27, 2011) (Martel et al. 2014; USFWS 2015).
    No information is available regarding the carrier status for the 
remaining 25 native species in 11 genera that are currently under 
review for ESA listing (USFWS 2015).

Additional Factors That Contribute to Consideration of Salamanders as 
Injurious

Likelihood of Release or Escape

    In general, there is widespread concern over the increasing spread 
of pathogens moved through the wildlife trade (for example, Karesh et 
al. 2005). Substantial evidence shows that Bd has spread extensively 
throughout the world through the amphibian trade (Fisher and Garner 
2007; Schloegel et al. 2009; Schloegel et al. 2012; Galindo-Bustos 
2014; Kolby 2014; Kolby et al. 2014). Similar mechanisms of 
transmission and persistence in the closely related Bsal pathogen, 
along with detection of Bsal in captive salamanders imported by the pet 
trade into Great Britain, indicate that global movement of Bsal, 
similar to that of Bd, is not only possible but is already occurring 
(Cunningham 2015). Considering the occurrence of Bsal in the global pet 
trade, the risk to North American native species, and the number of 
salamanders that are imported into and transported throughout the 
United States through trade, Bsal is likely to be introduced into and 
spread throughout native salamander populations in the United States 
unless immediate action is taken to limit the import and interstate 
transport of salamanders that are likely to carry Bsal.
    Infected salamanders can transmit Bsal to other species even if the 
introduced salamander fails to establish a population. Evidence 
indicates that at least some of the salamanders capable of carrying 
Bsal can escape or be released and introduce Bsal into the environment. 
As described earlier, evidence exists for release of salamanders into 
the wild in the United States (Picco and Collins 2008; USGS 2015). As 
noted above in Invasiveness of Salamanders, the USGS Nonindigenous 
Aquatic Species database has records for 14 salamander species that 
have been observed outside their native range. Of those, 11 are native 
to the United States and were discovered outside of their native 
ranges, and 3 are exotic species from outside the United States. These 
findings mean that salamanders have been shown to exist, even if 
temporarily, outside their native range. As such, they are capable of 
transmitting Bsal into nonindigenous ecosystems. Infected native 
species that are imported and escape or are released into native 
habitats would also be capable of carrying Bsal into native

[[Page 1548]]

salamander ecosystems where Bsal has not previously been found.
    Infective Bsal zoospores can also be released into the environment 
if water or other materials used to house infected salamanders enter 
the environment due to improper disinfection and disposal methods. The 
water and materials become fomites to introduce the fungus into the 
environment if not decontaminated or disposed of properly. As described 
above under Environmental Conditions Needed to Survive, Bsal can likely 
live independent of a host long enough to infect other salamanders. Bd 
is known to remain viable for weeks in water and moist organic matter. 
Given our finding that Bd can serve as a surrogate for predicting 
Bsal's effects in salamanders at the population level, and since Bd 
does not require an amphibian host to remain viable, we expect that 
Bsal can also persist outside salamanders (as long as it has sufficient 
water or soil) long enough to come into contact with uninfected 
salamanders and start the disease cycle anew. As stated earlier, we 
also find that Bsal can be transmitted on dead salamanders or body 
parts.
    As discussed above in Introduction Pathways, there is evidence that 
Bd has escaped into the environment through untreated wastewater, 
increasing the likelihood that Bsal could also escape if brought in via 
contaminated water or improperly disposed of materials. While standards 
for the treatment and prevention of Bd exist, in part due to 
recognition of its status as an internationally notifiable disease 
under the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE), the effectiveness 
and widespread application of those standards are uncertain given that 
international protocols for responding to Bd do not exist and the need 
to improve international mechanisms to respond to disease-related 
threats to biodiversity (Voyles et al. 2014).
    Given the number of specimens that have been imported into the 
United States and Canada, it is unclear why Bsal has not yet been found 
in these countries (Muletz et al. 2014; Bales et al. 2015; Richgels et 
al. in review; Stephen et al. 2015). A comparison of Bd, which has 
spread in the United States, to Bsal yields some insights. Based on 
genetic analyses and examination of historical specimens, Bd may have 
originated from different places, including Japan, South Africa, or 
South America (Farrer et al. 2011; Rodriguez et al. 2014). In contrast, 
Bsal may have originated only from Asia, giving it fewer pathways to 
the United States (Martel et al. 2014). Importation of salamanders into 
the United States has also declined in recent years, suggesting that 
the propagule pressure may also be a factor by limiting the number of 
times in which Bsal could possibly be introduced through trade 
(Lockwood et al. 2005; USFWS OLE 2015). Bd may have spread more quickly 
than Bsal because of its ability to infect frogs, whereas research 
suggests that Bsal does not (Martel et al. 2014). Based on LEMIS data, 
frogs are traded in higher volumes than salamanders, increasing the 
probability of trade of a Bd-infected individual over a Bsal-infected 
individual. The USGS Nonindigenous Aquatic Species database also 
provides evidence for this higher level of trade, in that greater 
numbers of frogs are reported than salamanders. In addition, many frogs 
in trade, such as Rana catesbeiana (bullfrogs), are adaptable to a wide 
variety of environments and can easily become invasive once released in 
a watershed, as bullfrogs have become in the American West (Jennings 
and Hayes 1994; Rosen and Schwalbe 1995; Funk et al. 2011; Sepulveda et 
al. 2015; USGS 2015).
    Taken together with the other data we reviewed, this evidence 
suggests that Bsal is less likely to enter the United States than Bd. 
However, without action, the pathways for introduction and escape of 
Bsal are a significant and imminent threat that can best be managed by 
listing salamanders that can carry Bsal as injurious wildlife, thereby 
minimizing opportunities for Bsal to be introduced, establish, and 
spread in the United States.

Potential To Survive, Become Established, and Spread

    There is evidence that several of the species capable of carrying 
Bsal can survive long enough in the wild to transmit Bsal. The USGS 
Nonindigenous Aquatic Species database has records of 14 species and 
populations that have been observed in the United States outside of 
their native range (USGS 2015). Of those, 11 are native and have 
established populations outside of their native U.S. range: Eastern 
tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum), barred tiger salamander 
(Ambystoma mavortium mavortium), blotched tiger salamander (Ambystoma 
mavortium melanostictum), long-toed salamander (Ambystoma 
macrodactylum), three-toed amphiuma (Amphiuma tridactylum), black-
bellied salamander (Desmognathus quadramaculatus), Santeetlah dusky 
salamander (Desmognathus santeetlah), mudpuppy, eastern newt, lesser 
siren, and rough-skinned newt. The three species from outside the 
United States include Japanese newt, Oriental fire belly newt, and 
spotless stout newt (Pachytriton labiatus).
    According to Richgels et al. (in review), ``Although prevalence of 
Bsal in live amphibian shipments, probability of release of infected 
materials (including live or dead animals or wastewater), and 
likelihood of interaction between infectious material and na[iuml]ve 
free-ranging salamanders is unknown, given the large quantities of 
imported amphibians, even a small probability of infected animals or 
materials escaping into the wild could lead to introduction of 
[Bsal].'' As discussed earlier under Introduction Pathways and 
Environmental Conditions Needed to Survive, Bsal is expected to be able 
to survive outside of salamander hosts for several weeks given suitable 
conditions in water. If a salamander comes in contact with Bsal and 
then transmits it during a time when salamanders congregate, such as 
during breeding as described above under Habitats, Reproductive 
Processes, and Seasonal Habits, the potential for Bsal to survive, 
establish, and spread through animals or animal parts is significant. 
As we describe above under How the Fungus Affects Salamanders, Bsal can 
be transmitted on dead tissue where keratin is present, particularly 
skin, but do not find that Bsal can be transmitted through reproductive 
tissue including eggs and gametes.
    As Richgels et al. (in review) noted, ``[T]he patterns of global Bd 
spread suggests that given release, exposure of native populations is 
likely. If Bsal follows similar patterns to the spread of Bd and no 
additional risk mitigation steps are taken, Bsal is likely to be 
introduced to the US.'' The Service finds that the capacity of infected 
salamanders to serve as the vector for infecting wild salamanders, 
together with the capacity of Bsal to survive for an extended period 
independent of an amphibian host, suggests that Bsal has a high 
likelihood of surviving, establishing, and spreading once it is 
introduced into a new area.

Impacts on Wildlife Resources or Ecosystems

    If Bsal is introduced into the United States, we expect the species 
with lethal vulnerability would be at greatest risk. However, disease 
outbreaks can result from a combination of biotic and abiotic factors, 
including species vulnerability, exposure, behavior, immunity, co-
infections, and environmental conditions (Wobeser 2007). Therefore, the 
vulnerability of individuals under laboratory conditions is an 
incomplete predictor of disease effects (Wobeser

[[Page 1549]]

2007). Native salamander species known to be tolerant of Bsal infection 
under experimental conditions may demonstrate more severe clinical 
disease when infection is combined with additional stressors in the 
wild, as has been found for other diseases, including those in 
amphibians (Wobeser 2007; Kerby et al. 2011; Kiesecker 2011). For 
example, Bodinof et al. (2011) noted that Bd may be found more 
frequently in hellbenders that are immune-compromised or that Bd 
infection increases the adverse effects of such species to other 
infections. Considering these cumulative factors, as well as the lack 
of data for the majority of native salamander species, our assessment 
of risk in native species is likely conservative.
    Bsal can severely affect wildlife resources. At least 2 native 
species are lethally vulnerable to Bsal and at least 1 is tolerant to 
Bsal infection. At least 67 native species can act as carriers or 
sources of infection for other species. While not all species have been 
tested for their response to Bsal, based on the high rates of infection 
that have been observed, the fungus may have significant negative 
effects on additional species.
    As described above in Ecosystem-Level Effects, salamanders are 
important parts of the ecosystems in which they occur. They are often 
the most abundant vertebrates in their ecosystems, and, as a vital part 
of the food web, they are both important prey for and predators of many 
species (Holomuzki et al. 1994; Regester et al. 2006). In some places, 
they are considered keystone species that help control some 
invertebrate populations and affect cycling of nutrients in an 
ecosystem, contributing significantly to overall ecosystem health. For 
example, by consuming arthropods that would otherwise release carbon 
dioxide into the atmosphere by decomposing leaf litter in forests, 
salamanders slow carbon emissions from leaf litter decomposition, which 
has implications for the global carbon cycle (Best and Welsh 2014). As 
described earlier, invertebrate species that depend on salamanders for 
aspects of their life cycle or ecology are likely to be adversely 
affected if their host species declines in response to a Bsal 
introduction. Loss of these keystone species would result in 
significant ecosystem-level change.
    Salamanders constitute much of the vertebrate biomass of forests, 
and they play an important role in ecosystems as insect consumers, 
shapers of the landscape, and climate mediators (Burton and Likens 
1975; Davic and Welsh 2004; Wyman 1998; Best and Welsh 2014). If native 
U.S. salamander species were to experience declines from Bsal infection 
as the fire salamander experienced in the Netherlands (Spitzen-van der 
Sluijs et al. 2013), we expect detrimental ecological effects.
    The eastern newt, one of the lethally vulnerable species, is one of 
the most widespread salamander species in North America (Roe and 
Grayson 2008, Martel et al. 2014). As top predators in pond ecosystems, 
eastern newts regulate frog tadpole abundance and, therefore, affect 
the amount and type of nutrients available in the ponds, keeping them 
in ecological balance (Morin et al. 1983; Morin 1995). If eastern newt 
populations decline because of Bsal infection in the wild, imbalances 
could result in ponds and ecosystems throughout the eastern United 
States. Eastern newts also travel long distances between aquatic and 
terrestrial habitats (Roe and Grayson 2008), so if the species was to 
be eliminated from an area, the amount of nutrients available in upland 
areas would also be affected.
    The other native U.S. species known to be lethally vulnerable to 
Bsal, the rough-skinned newt, is geographically widespread along the 
Pacific Coast of North America from Santa Cruz, California, to 
southeastern Alaska (Martel et al. 2014; Amphibiaweb 2015a). The rough-
skinned newt plays an important role in ecosystems through its 
consumption of invertebrates that break down leaf litter and release 
carbon into the atmosphere (Davic and Welsh 2004). If rough-skinned 
newt populations were to experience severe declines from Bsal 
infection, a result could be significant additional inputs of carbon in 
the atmosphere, as has been observed with other species (Wyman 1998; 
Best and Welsh 2014).
    As Richgels et al. (in review) noted, some parts of the United 
States may reach temperatures above the thermal tolerance of Bsal on a 
seasonal basis. However, wildlife and habitats would suffer losses if 
local populations of salamanders affected by Bsal prior to temperatures 
rising as part of the regular seasonal cycle suffered declines (and 
possible extirpation) and were unable to return to pre-infection levels 
in those ecosystems.
    For these reasons, we conclude that the negative impact to wildlife 
resources or ecosystems is expected to be high if Bsal is introduced 
into U.S. ecosystems.

Impact to Threatened and Endangered Species and Their Habitats

    None of the salamander species listed as endangered or threatened 
under the ESA in the United States have been specifically tested for 
Bsal vulnerability under laboratory conditions; Bsal has not been 
detected in their wild populations (Martel et al. 2014, Bales et al. 
2015). Of the genera that include native species that we have 
identified as carriers, 4 species are federally listed as threatened or 
endangered or are candidates for listing. In addition, 8 species of 
native salamanders from genera that were identified as carriers are in 
various stages of review for possible ESA listing in the future (USFWS 
2015). Because not all species have been tested, it is possible that 
the fungus will negatively affect other ESA-protected species.

Impacts to Human Beings, Forestry, Horticulture, and Agriculture

    We do not expect direct effects to forestry, horticulture, or 
agriculture. Bsal does not appear to infect humans or other animals 
except for salamanders. Trees and other plants are also not affected. 
Indirectly, the introduction or establishment of Bsal would have 
negative effects on humans primarily from the loss of native wildlife 
biodiversity. These losses would affect the aesthetic, recreational, 
and economic values currently provided by native wildlife and healthy 
ecosystems. Educational values would also be diminished through the 
loss of biodiversity and ecosystem health. However, we are not listing 
the species because of the indirect impacts to forestry, horticulture, 
or agriculture, but rather due to their impacts to wildlife and 
wildlife resources.

Wildlife or Habitat Damages That May Occur From Control Measures

    Richgels et al. (in review) stated, ``[T]here are few known viable 
treatment or management options for responding to the introduction of 
Bsal . . . hence mitigation strategies should focus on prevention or 
reduction of introduction events.'' As discussed below in Ability to 
Prevent or Control the Spread of Pathogens or Parasites, current 
control strategies appear to focus on treating salamanders in a 
controlled laboratory setting. We are not aware of control measures 
that are effective in treating infected salamanders over a large-scale 
area that could eliminate Bsal without killing the salamanders 
themselves.
    In an effort to control Bsal, it might be possible to kill all 
salamanders in an area and repopulate it after the fungus has been 
given enough time to clear from the environment. However, the life 
history of salamanders makes it highly unlikely that all individuals, 
including those that are infected, could be completely eradicated. Many 
species are

[[Page 1550]]

long-lived and inhabit areas that may be hard to reach. In addition, 
the effects on other wildlife of chemically treating an area in order 
to eradicate infected salamanders is unknown but could be expected to 
be severe.

Ability To Prevent Escape and Establishment

    We considered whether it was practical for an exporting foreign 
nation to produce a health certificate stating that a possible carrier 
of Bsal has been found to be free of the fungus. Such action would help 
ensure that Bsal does not escape from an exporting nation by being 
carried on an infected salamander. However, there are significant 
concerns regarding the effectiveness and sensitivity of current testing 
methods (including the return of false negatives), lack of validation 
and sufficient testing capacity, and agency resources required to 
conduct inspections, interpret results, and issue health certificates. 
Although some countries may have the necessary skills to prepare a 
health certification that salamanders are free of Bsal, not all 
exporting nations may have the necessary skills or resources. 
Scientists and diagnostic laboratories are also working to standardize 
laboratory protocols (Ballard, pers. comm.).
    As discussed below in Ability to Prevent or Control the Spread of 
Pathogens or Parasites, the ability and effectiveness of measures to 
prevent or control Bsal is currently low. While less certain, we also 
expect the ability to prevent escape and establishment is also low. 
Nonregulatory actions, such as implementing voluntary Best Management 
Practices or individual State action, are possible. The Service, for 
example, is working with partners on efforts such as 
HabitattitudeTM, which encourages responsible consumer 
actions with respect to pet ownership. Such actions include finding 
alternatives to releasing pets into the environment. Voluntary actions, 
such as applying heat therapy as described in Blooi et al. (2015a) and 
Blooi et al. (2015b), may help reduce the threat posed by Bsal. 
However, at this time it is not possible to determine the likelihood of 
success of such measures.
    As described earlier under Invasiveness of Salamanders and General 
Description of Chytrid Fungus, salamanders have escaped into the 
ecosystem, and Bd, a related fungus, has also escaped and established 
in the United States. Therefore, we expect the likelihood of the 
Service's ability to prevent escape and establishment of Bsal through 
infected salamanders to be low. Although voluntary actions are vital to 
help minimize the threat of invasive species, the Service is highly 
concerned about the extensive damage that introduction of Bsal would do 
to this nation's resources. As a result, we concluded that we cannot 
rely on voluntary actions alone to address the severity of the threat 
that Bsal poses and that other measures to prevent escape and 
establishment are not sufficient to ensure Bsal is not successfully 
introduced.
    Therefore, we find that we cannot rely on these approaches to 
prevent escape and establishment of Bsal and that our current capacity 
to prevent escape and establishment is low.

Potential To Eradicate or Manage Established Populations

    While some introduced salamanders in the United States have been 
successfully controlled, such as the lesser siren (which was eliminated 
from a backyard pond outside its native U.S. range), others such as the 
three-toed amphiuma have not (USGS 2015). However, evidence for control 
is sparse. Given the high rates of infection among salamanders tested 
by Martel et al. (2014), and the lack of control measures for Bsal that 
could be employed outside of a controlled facility, it is likely that 
Bsal would persist once introduced into the environment given 
appropriate environmental conditions, especially if a tolerant or 
susceptible salamander established a population and continued to spread 
Bsal.

Ability To Rehabilitate Disturbed Ecosystems

    Bsal infection can lead to the loss of keystone species in the 
ecosystem. The ability to rehabilitate disturbed ecosystems is expected 
to be low. We considered whether the Service's National Fish Hatchery 
System (NFHS) could be used to maintain salamanders in refugia while 
areas are treated, much as we maintain a population of the San Marcos 
salamander, which is listed as threatened, at the Uvalde National Fish 
Hatchery. However, it is impractical to equip NFHS facilities to be 
able to rapidly protect numerous salamander populations and maintain 
them for an extended time such as might be required due to Bsal's 
introduction. Although, as described in the next section, a few options 
exist to treat individual salamanders, none have been identified that 
can be used to clear Bsal from a widespread area. Consequently, we 
expect that once Bsal has been introduced, it will persist and spread 
with little opportunity for widespread disinfection from ecosystems.
    Studies have also questioned the effectiveness of captive-breeding 
programs to address threats, such as infectious disease, to amphibians, 
including salamanders (Harding et al. 2015). Research on booroolong 
frogs (Litoria booroolongensis) demonstrated that exposing them to Bd 
did not improve their chances of mitigating future reinfection (Cashins 
et al. 2013). We expect, given similarities of Bd to Bsal, that 
salamanders will also show a similar response to Bsal infection. As a 
result, it may not be possible to stimulate an immune response in 
captive salamander populations that would allow them to be reintroduced 
into ecosystems where Bsal may still exist.
    Therefore, the ability to rehabilitate disturbed ecosystems is 
expected to be low because the Service would be unable to ensure that 
it could treat and protect all salamander populations expected to be 
affected by Bsal in the wild.

 Ability To Prevent or Control the Spread of Pathogens or Parasites

    The ability and effectiveness of measures to prevent or control 
Bsal is currently low. Few options can ensure potentially infected 
salamanders do not carry Bsal. Blooi et al. (2015a) has shown that 
treating salamanders infected with Bsal by exposing them ``to 25 [deg]C 
[77 [deg]F] for 10 days resulted in complete clearance of infection and 
clinically cured all experimentally infected animals. This treatment 
protocol was validated in naturally infected wild fire salamanders.'' 
The authors found that temperature treatment could be an effective 
option given the host salamander's thermal tolerance. However, the 
treatment does have some shortcomings. It is unknown whether all 
salamander species can tolerate the thermal regime required (Kolby, 
pers. comm.). Blooi et al. (2015a) also noted that there is some 
uncertainty as to whether the method is completely effective, as 
evidence of Bsal was found after thermal treatment, although it is 
possible that the evidence consisted of dead cells only.
    Other treatment options also exist, such as treatment with 
antifungal medications that can be applied on animals that do not 
tolerate 25 [deg]C (77 [deg]F) (Martel, pers. comm; Blooi et al. 
2015b). It may be possible to treat amphibians in the wild for Bd with 
antifungals by capturing individuals and soaking them in a bath of the 
chemical, then releasing them back into the environment. This process 
does not seem to be as effective as desired, but may delay the eventual 
outcome of an outbreak enough to help individuals persist in the 
population (Hardy et al. 2015). Blooi et al. (2015b)

[[Page 1551]]

identified a method for treating infected salamanders with a 
combination of antifungals and temperature control that successfully 
cleared Bsal; however, such treatment worked only for controlled 
settings such as those found in a laboratory or conservation facility 
and is impractical to treat widespread areas in the natural environment 
given the likely cost, personnel, and time needed to locate and treat 
all salamanders in the wild. As we have noted above under Environmental 
Conditions Needed to Survive, Bsal is likely capable of persisting in 
the environment without a host by transmission to infected materials. 
Even if all individuals of a population could be successfully treated, 
the threat of reintroduction from environmental contamination would 
still exist.
    Given the expected severity of consequences of Bsal introduction, 
all imported salamanders that could be carriers would need to be 
treated, which is not practical at this time due to the limited 
conditions under which this treatment is effective. Not all species 
will tolerate treatment, and reliable diagnostic capacity is needed to 
verify that animals do not carry Bsal following treatment. If an 
outbreak occurs, it would not be practical to locate and treat all 
individuals in the wild in U.S. ecosystems. While antifungal agents 
could be applied to all animals, either in the laboratory or perhaps 
applied over a large geographic area, we are concerned about side 
effects on the animals being treated. We are also concerned about 
possible negative environmental effects if a chemical was widely 
applied (Gyllenhammar et al. 2009; Hasselberg et al. 2008).

Any Potential Ecological Benefits to Introduction

    There are no known benefits of Bsal or of salamanders carrying 
Bsal. The risks to native wildlife and wildlife resources greatly 
outweigh any unlikely benefits. There are no other potential ecological 
benefits for the introduction of Bsal or of Bsal-infected or Bsal-
carrier salamanders into the United States.

Conclusion

    Overall, there is a high risk to the wildlife and wildlife 
resources of the United States from salamanders that are capable of 
carrying Bsal. The United States leads all other countries in 
salamander diversity. Of the 190 native U.S. species, the vulnerability 
of 7 has been tested. We find that the fungus can infect and is lethal 
to at least 2 salamander species native to the United States and that a 
total of 67 native species are carriers of Bsal. The vulnerability and 
carrier status of 103 species have not been evaluated, many of which 
may also be vulnerable to this potentially deadly fungus. The disease 
may stress species with less lethal vulnerability under wild 
conditions; if these species are stressed by other factors, Bsal could 
cause harm to additional species in the face of cumulative stressors. 
The benefits that these native salamander species provide to 
ecosystems, and in turn the ecosystem services that benefit people, are 
significant. The Service concludes that preventing Bsal from infecting 
native salamanders will prevent harmful effects to the wildlife and 
wildlife resources of the United States and merits listing of 
salamanders capable of carrying Bsal as injurious.
    Salamanders capable of carrying Bsal have the potential to escape 
and spread Bsal. Species capable of carrying Bsal can survive long 
enough in the wild to transmit the fungus or can transmit it to other 
carriers while in transit. Bsal can also be introduced and infect 
native salamanders by improper disposal of material that comes in 
contact with infected salamanders, and persist long enough in the 
environment without a host to represent a threat.
    There is evidence that all species within a genus, where at least 
one species has been identified as a carrier of Bsal, can also be a 
threat. Our analysis found no conclusive evidence to the contrary. We 
find that, due to shared characteristics by species within a genus, 
other species within these genera are also highly likely to be carriers 
of Bsal, even if not every species in the genus has been tested to 
verify that it is a carrier of Bsal. Hybrids consisting of species 
found entirely within a genus identified as a carrier are also expected 
to be carriers.
    The main pathway for the global spread of Bsal is the international 
trade in salamanders. The most likely pathway of a salamander that is a 
host to Bsal into the United States would include a pet store or online 
retailer. Listing salamanders that are capable of carrying Bsal as 
injurious wildlife will significantly confine this pathway and limit 
Bsal's capacity to be introduced, establish, and spread in the United 
States.
    The current capacity to prevent escape and establishment is low. 
Rehabilitation of disturbed ecosystems is expected to be very 
difficult. The ability and effectiveness of measures to prevent or 
control Bsal is currently low. There are no known benefits of Bsal.
    The Service is listing live and dead specimens, including parts. We 
find the risk of transmission of Bsal to other salamanders is high from 
both live and dead specimens. Any salamanders that are infected and 
lethally vulnerable may die in transport and continue to carry Bsal 
into the United States. The risk is also high from improper disposal of 
materials that might be contaminated by those live or dead specimens. 
While we cannot list contaminated materials as injurious under the 
authority of the Act, by listing the carriers of Bsal, we seek to 
prevent the introduction of such materials.
    The Service is not adding eggs or gametes because Bsal does not 
appear to affect reproductive tissue such as eggs or gametes. The 
Service is not listing genera that we find are not carriers of Bsal 
because such salamanders are not capable of introducing Bsal to the 
United States or otherwise transmitting it to native populations. We 
are also not listing genera where there is no data, even though it is 
possible that untested genera may also be capable of carrying Bsal.
    For the reasons stated, the Service finds the 20 genera of 
salamanders to be injurious to the wildlife and wildlife resources of 
the United States. The potential for Bsal introduction into the United 
States is high, the United States has suitable conditions for Bsal 
survival, and the consequences of introduction into the United States 
are expected to be significant and occur across a wide range of the 
United States. By listing species that can carry Bsal, we are taking 
immediate action to help ensure the fungus does not enter the United 
States and infect native salamander populations and cause severe 
individual mortality, population declines, and ecosystem harm. We are 
not listing genera for which data is unavailable because we do not have 
a basis for doing so.

Required Determinations

Regulatory Planning and Review

    Executive Order 12866 provides that the Office of Information and 
Regulatory Affairs in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) will 
review all significant rules. The Office of Information and Regulatory 
Affairs has determined that this rule is not significant.
    Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the principles of Executive Order 
12866 while calling for improvements in the nation's regulatory system 
to promote predictability, to reduce uncertainty, and to use the best, 
most innovative, and least burdensome tools for achieving regulatory 
ends. The executive order directs agencies to consider regulatory 
approaches that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility

[[Page 1552]]

and freedom of choice for the public where these approaches are 
relevant, feasible, and consistent with regulatory objectives. 
Executive Order 13563 emphasizes further that the regulatory system 
must allow for public participation and an open exchange of ideas. We 
have developed this rule in a manner consistent with these principles.
    Executive Order 12866, Economic Analysis of Federal Regulations 
under Executive Order 12866 (OMB 1996), and Circular A-4 (OMB 2003) 
identify guidelines or ``best practices'' for the economic analysis of 
Federal regulations. In the context of the specific regulation under 
consideration, we anticipate minor economic impacts.
    The rule listing 20 genera of salamanders would prohibit an 
estimated 217,000 salamanders from being imported per year, and a 
minimum of 338 domestically bred salamanders may be affected due to the 
interstate transportation prohibition. The maximum annual loss to 
entities that deal in these species is $3.8 million in revenue. The 
maximum annual loss to the economy is estimated to be $10.0 million. 
The preferred alternative (Alternative 3, described below) does not 
meet the cost criteria for a significant rule. Furthermore, the 
preferred alternative is not expected to have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities.
    In the long term, the rule is expected to benefit the economy. 
Efforts to control or eradicate invasive species, and manage the costs 
they incur to society, once they have become established are generally 
recognized as being less effective and more expensive than efforts to 
prevent potentially invasive species from establishing in the first 
place (Leung et al. 2002, Finnoff et al. 2007). As a result, sectors of 
the economy that will not need to expend resources to control or manage 
injurious wildlife will be expected to gain from a timely listing 
process.
    The Service considered five alternatives under Executive Order 
12866 for the economic analysis for this rule: (1) No action; (2) 
listing species that were identified by Martel et al. (2014) and other 
sources to be carriers of Bsal; (3) listing all species in genera in 
which there is at least one confirmed carrier and all species in the 
genus are likely to be a carrier; (4) listing all salamanders; and (5) 
requiring a health certificate stating that the animal being moved is 
free of Bsal, in lieu of or in addition to listing. The purpose of 
considering alternatives is to identify whether there is a more 
effective option that can achieve the desired goals of the rule.
    Alternative 1 was no action. This is the status quo. We would not 
list any species of salamanders as injurious. We did not select this 
option because of the significant risk that Bsal poses to native 
species and other wildlife resources in the United States. We expect 
that significantly greater financial and natural resources losses will 
be incurred by us and our partners in having to manage and respond to 
Bsal if the fungus establishes and spreads in the United States than by 
taking action now to prevent and minimize its introduction. No loss of 
retail sales or economic output due to actions by the Service would 
result from this alternative. It is expected that costs would be 
incurred by the salamander and ancillary industries due to Bsal 
management and the impact of Bsal on the supply of salamanders.
    Alternative 2 was listing only those species that Martel et al. 
(2014) and Cunningham et al. (2015) (as explained further in 
Chytridcrisis 2015b) confirmed are carriers of Bsal. The list of 
species that Martel et al. (2014) and Cunningham et al. (2015) 
evaluated is considerably smaller and consists of 27 species. As 
described earlier in Vulnerability and Carrier Status, we have 
determined that all species in a genus will share similar 
characteristics that make them capable of serving as a carrier of Bsal. 
Between 2004 and 2014 (USFWS OLE 2015), 1.6 million salamanders of 
these species were imported that would have been sold for an estimated 
retail value of $22.8 million; the maximum annual loss to entities that 
deal in these species would be $2.1 million in revenue. The maximum 
annual loss to the economy under this alternative is estimated to be 
$5.6 million.
    Alternative 3 was listing all species in genera where there is at 
least one confirmed carrier and all species in that genus are likely to 
be a carrier. As we described earlier, we have a sound scientific basis 
to conclude that all species in a genus will share similar 
characteristics in regards to whether they are capable of serving as a 
carrier of Bsal. Martel et al. (2014) did not find any examples of 
species in a genus where one species was likely to be a carrier and 
another species was not, with two exceptions as discussed above. Given 
the significant risk that Bsal poses, we find it is important to list 
all species that are likely to be carriers of the fungus. This 
alternative was selected for this interim rule. Between 2004 and 2014 
(USFWS OLE 2015), 2.4 million salamanders of these genera were imported 
that would have been sold for an estimated retail value of $41.4 
million; the maximum annual loss to entities that deal in these species 
would be $3.8 million in revenue. The maximum annual loss to the 
economy under this alternative is estimated to be $10.0 million.
    Alternative 4 was listing all salamanders in the world. There are 
approximately 681 species of salamanders. Although some species that we 
are not listing may be negatively vulnerable to or serve as carriers of 
Bsal, we are taking immediate action against those species that current 
scientific research and analysis has confirmed are carriers of Bsal, 
along with other species in the genus that share the same traits that 
make them highly likely to be carriers of Bsal. Between 2004 and 2014 
(USFWS OLE 2015), 2.5 million salamanders were imported that would have 
been sold for an estimated retail value of $43.9 million. The maximum 
annual loss to entities that deal in these species is estimated to be 
$4.0 million in revenue. The maximum annual loss to the economy under 
this alternative is estimated to be $10.7 million.
    Alternative 5 would have required a health certificate that must 
accompany salamanders being imported and transported across State lines 
that states that the animal being imported or moved through interstate 
movement is free of Bsal in lieu of or in addition to listing. The 
Service did not select this option because of concerns regarding the 
effectiveness of current testing methods, the lack of available testing 
capacity, expenses associated with testing each shipment, and 
inadequate agency resources to conduct inspections, interpret the 
results, and issue health certificates. It is uncertain what the loss 
in revenue and economic output would be due to this alternative. The 
minimum effect would be identical to Alternative 1 (No Action), and the 
maximum effect would be that of Alternative 4 (prohibiting all 
salamanders). The effect on the number imported or transported depends 
on the cost of compliance. Therefore, of the 2.5 million salamanders 
that were imported between 2004 and 2014 (USFWS OLE 2015), all or none 
may have been imported or transported under these circumstances. They 
would have been sold for up to an estimated retail value of $43.9 
million. The maximum annual loss to entities that deal in these species 
is $4.0 million in revenue. The maximum annual loss to the economy is 
estimated to be $10.7 million.
    We considered other alternatives that we rejected because we do not 
have the authority under the Lacey Act to

[[Page 1553]]

implement them ourselves. For example, we do not have the authority or 
capacity to establish and enforce a quarantine system. As a result, we 
cannot require all shipments to wait in quarantine for a period of time 
sufficient to prove that imported animals do not carry Bsal or to treat 
them prophylactically.
    We also considered encouraging partners to take nonregulatory 
action, such as voluntary Best Management Practices or individual State 
action. The Service will pursue such actions as it moves forward, and 
we are working with partners on efforts such as 
HabitattitudeTM, which encourages responsible consumer 
actions with respect to pet ownership. Voluntary actions, such as 
applying heat therapy as described in Blooi et al. (2015a) and Blooi et 
al. (2015b), may help reduce the threat posed by Bsal. Although 
voluntary actions are vital to help minimize the threat of invasive 
species, the Service is highly concerned about the extensive damage 
that introduction of Bsal would do to this nation's resources and 
concluded that we cannot rely on voluntary actions alone in this 
instance to address the severity of the threat that Bsal poses.

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Secretary of the Interior certifies that this rule will not 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities. A regulatory flexibility analysis under the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act (as amended by the Small Business Regulatory 
Enforcement Fairness Act [SBREFA] of 1996) (5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.), is 
not required. The factual basis for this certification is provided in a 
draft regulatory flexibility analysis in the economic analysis, 
prepared to accompany this rule, which we briefly summarize below. See 
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT or http://www.regulations.gov under 
Docket No. FWS-HQ-FAC-2015-0005 for the complete document.
    Although an interim rule allows us to move more quickly to 
implement the listing, it does not change the substantive basis for the 
listing decision, modify the types of organizations that would be 
affected by the rule, or affect the future administration of the Act as 
it applies to small entities to which the listing decision applies. In 
general, entities that are affected by an injurious listing decision 
would include:
    (1) entities importing animals, gametes, viable eggs, and hybrids 
of species; and
    (2) entities (including breeders and wholesalers) with interstate 
sales of animals, gametes, viable eggs, and hybrids. (However, this 
rule does not include provisions pertaining to gametes and viable 
eggs.)
    The ultimate effects of any listing on these entities would depend 
on the amount of interstate sales within the taxon's market. Impacts 
would also depend upon whether or not close substitutes for the species 
listed by this rule exist. In this case, the rule:
    a. Will not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or 
more.
    b. Would not cause a major increase in costs or prices for 
consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government 
agencies, or geographic regions.
    c. Would not have significant adverse effects on competition, 
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of 
United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based 
enterprises.
    Listing 20 genera of salamanders would prohibit an estimated 
217,000 salamanders imported per year; 338 domestically bred 
salamanders would face the interstate transportation prohibition. The 
maximum annual loss to entities that deal in these species is $3.8 
million in revenue. Small businesses are expected to incur $2.3 million 
of the burden. Impacts per small business may be as high as $453,000 
for importers and $23,000 for domestic breeders.
    The interim rule makes no changes in the compliance requirements of 
any business. The Service is unaware of any duplicative, overlapping, 
or conflicting Federal rules. Several States implement similar acts 
that are more restrictive than the Federal law.

Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act

    The interim rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the 
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. This rule:
    a. Would not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million 
or more. The rule listing 20 genera of salamanders, including 201 
species, would prohibit an estimated 217,000 salamanders imported per 
year, and prohibit the interstate movement of at least 338 domestically 
bred individuals. The maximum annual loss to entities that deal in 
these species is $3.8 million in revenue. Small businesses are expected 
to incur $2.3 million of the burden. Impacts per small business may be 
as high as $453,000 for importers and $23,000 for domestic breeders. In 
addition, businesses would also face the risk of fines if caught 
transporting these salamanders or their parts across State lines. The 
penalty for violation of the Act is not more than 6 months in prison 
and not more than a $5,000 fine for an individual and not more than a 
$10,000 fine for an organization.
    b. Would not cause a major increase in costs or prices for 
consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government 
agencies, or geographic regions. Businesses breeding or selling the 
listed salamanders would be able to substitute other species and 
maintain business. Some businesses, however, may close. We do not have 
data for the potential substitutions, and, therefore, we do not know 
the number of businesses that may close.
    c. Would not have significant adverse effects on competition, 
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of 
United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based 
enterprises.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.)

    In accordance with the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 
1501), the Service makes the following findings:
    a. This rule would not produce a Federal mandate. In general, a 
Federal mandate is a provision in legislation, statute, or regulation 
that would impose an enforceable duty upon State, local, or tribal 
governments, or the private sector.
    b. The rule would not have a significant or unique effect on State, 
local, or tribal governments or the private sector. A statement 
containing the information required by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act 
(2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not required.

Takings

    In accordance with Executive Order 12630 (Government Actions and 
Interference with Constitutionally Protected Private Property Rights), 
the rule does not have significant takings implications. A takings 
implication assessment is not required. This rule would not impose 
significant requirements or limitations on private property use. While 
import and interstate transport of any of the listed species is 
prohibited, any person who currently owns one of the listed species can 
continue to possess the salamander and engage in intrastate transport 
and other activities within their State or territory, as allowed under 
State, tribal, or territorial law.

Federalism

    In accordance with Executive Order 13132 (Federalism), this interim 
rule does not have significant Federalism effects. A Federalism 
assessment is not required. This rule would not have any

[[Page 1554]]

direct effects on States, on the relationship between the Federal 
Government and the States, or on the distribution of power and 
responsibilities among the various levels of government. Therefore, in 
accordance with Executive Order 13132, we determine that this rule does 
not have sufficient Federalism implications to warrant the preparation 
of a Federalism Assessment.

Civil Justice Reform

    In accordance with Executive Order 12988, the Office of the 
Solicitor has determined that the interim rule does not unduly burden 
the judicial system and meets the requirements of sections 3(a) and 
3(b)(2) of the Executive Order. The interim rule has been reviewed to 
eliminate drafting errors and ambiguity, was written to minimize 
litigation, provides a clear legal standard for affected conduct rather 
than a general standard, and promotes simplification and burden 
reduction.

Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)

    This rule does not contain any new collections of information that 
require approval by OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). This rule will not impose new recordkeeping or 
reporting requirements on State or local governments, individuals, 
businesses, or organizations. OMB has approved the information 
collection requirements associated with the required permits and 
assigned OMB Control No. 1018-0093, which expires May 31, 2017. We may 
not conduct or sponsor, and you are not required to respond to, a 
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number.

National Environmental Policy Act

    We have reviewed this rule in accordance with the criteria of the 
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and our Departmental Manual in 
516 DM. This rule does not constitute a major Federal action 
significantly affecting the quality of the human environment. Under 
Department of the Interior agency policy and procedures, this rule is 
covered by a categorical exclusion and preparation of a detailed 
statement under NEPA is not required because it adds species to the 
list of injurious wildlife under 50 CFR subchapter B, part 16, which 
prohibits the importation into the United States and interstate 
transport of wildlife found to be injurious. (For further information, 
see 80 FR 66554; October 29, 2015.) We have also determined that the 
rule does not involve any of the extraordinary circumstances listed in 
43 CFR 46.215 that would require further analysis under NEPA.

Clarity of Rule

    We are required by Executive Orders 12866 and 12988 and by the 
Presidential Memorandum of June 1, 1998, to write all rules in plain 
language. This means that each rule we publish must:
    a. Be logically organized;
    b. Use the active voice to address readers directly;
    c. Use clear language rather than jargon;
    d. Be divided into short sections and sentences; and
    e. Use lists and tables wherever possible.
    If you feel that we have not met these requirements, send us 
comments by one of the methods listed in ADDRESSES. To help us revise 
the rule, your comments should be as specific as possible. For example, 
you should tell us the numbers of the sections or paragraphs that are 
unclearly written, which sections or sentences are too long, and the 
sections where you feel lists or tables would be useful.

Government-to-Government Relationship With Tribes

    In accordance with the President's memorandum of April 29, 1994, 
``Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal 
Governments'' (59 FR 22951), Executive Order 13175, and the Department 
of the Interior's manual at 512 DM 2, we readily acknowledge our 
responsibility to communicate meaningfully with recognized Federal 
tribes on a government-to-government basis. In accordance with 
Secretarial Order 3206 of June 5, 1997 (American Indian Tribal Rights, 
Federal-Tribal Trust Responsibilities, and the Endangered Species Act), 
we readily acknowledge our responsibilities to work directly with 
tribes in developing programs for healthy ecosystems, to acknowledge 
that tribal lands are not subject to the same controls as Federal 
public lands, to remain sensitive to Indian culture, and to make 
information available to tribes. We have evaluated potential effects on 
federally recognized Indian tribes and have determined that there are 
no potential effects. This rule involves the importation and interstate 
movement of salamanders. We are unaware of such movement in these 
species by tribes.

Effects on Energy

    Executive Order 13211 requires agencies to prepare Statements of 
Energy Effects when undertaking certain actions. This rule is not 
expected to affect energy supplies, distribution, and use. Therefore, 
this action is a not a significant energy action and no Statement of 
Energy Effects is required.

References Cited

    A complete list of all references used in this rulemaking is 
available at http://www.regulations.gov under Docket No. FWS-HQ-FAC-
2015-0005.

Authors

    The primary authors of this interim rule are the staff members of 
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 16

    Fish, Imports, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, 
Transportation, Wildlife.

Regulation Promulgation

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the U.S. Fish and 
Wildlife Service amends part 16, subchapter B of chapter I, title 50 of 
the Code of Federal Regulations, as follows:

PART 16--[AMENDED]

0
1. The authority citation for part 16 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 18 U.S.C. 42.


0
2. Revise Sec.  16.14 to read as follows:


Sec.  16.14  Importation of live or dead amphibians or their eggs.

    (a) The importation, transportation, or acquisition of any live or 
dead specimen, including parts, but not eggs or gametes, of the genera 
Chioglossa, Cynops, Euproctus, Hydromantes, Hynobius, Ichthyosaura, 
Lissotriton, Neurergus, Notophthalmus, Onychodactylus, Paramesotriton, 
Plethodon, Pleurodeles, Salamandra, Salamandrella, Salamandrina, Siren, 
Taricha, Triturus, and Tylototriton, including but not limited to, the 
species listed in this paragraph, is prohibited except as provided 
under the terms and conditions set forth at Sec.  16.22 of this part:
    (1) Chioglossa lusitanica (golden striped salamander).
    (2) Cynops chenggongensis (Chenggong fire-bellied newt).
    (3) Cynops cyanurus (blue-tailed fire-bellied newt).
    (4) Cynops ensicauda (sword-tailed newt).
    (5) Cynops fudingensis (Fuding fire-bellied newt).
    (6) Cynops glaucus (bluish grey newt, Huilan Rongyuan).
    (7) Cynops orientalis (Oriental fire belly newt, Oriental fire-
bellied newt).

[[Page 1555]]

    (8) Cynops orphicus (no common name).
    (9) Cynops pyrrhogaster (Japanese newt, Japanese fire-bellied 
newt).
    (10) Cynops wolterstorffi (Kunming Lake newt).
    (11) Euproctus montanus (Corsican brook salamander).
    (12) Euproctus platycephalus (Sardinian brook salamander).
    (13) Hydromantes ambrosii (Ambrosi salamander).
    (14) Hydromantes brunus (limestone salamander).
    (15) Hydromantes flavus (Mount Albo cave salamander).
    (16) Hydromantes genei (Sardinian cave salamander).
    (17) Hydromantes imperialis (imperial cave salamander).
    (18) Hydromantes italicus (Italian cave salamander).
    (19) Hydromantes platycephalus (Mount Lyell salamander).
    (20) Hydromantes sarrabusensis (no common name).
    (21) Hydromantes shastae (Shasta salamander).
    (22) Hydromantes strinatii or Speleomantes strinatii (French cave 
salamander, Strinati's cave salamander).
    (23) Hydromantes supramontis (Supramonte cave salamander).
    (24) Hynobius abei (Abe's salamander).
    (25) Hynobius amakusaensis (Amakusa-sanshouo).
    (26) Hynobius amjiensis (Anji salamander).
    (27) Hynobius arisanensis (Arisan hynobid).
    (28) Hynobius boulengeri (Odaigahara salamander).
    (29) Hynobius chinensis (Chinese salamander).
    (30) Hynobius dunni (Oita salamander).
    (31) Hynobius formosanus (Taiwan salamander).
    (32) Hynobius fucus or Hynobius fuca (Taiwan lesser salamander).
    (33) Hynobius glacialis (Nanhu salamander).
    (34) Hynobius guabangshanensis (no common name).
    (35) Hynobius hidamontanus (Hakuba salamander).
    (36) Hynobius hirosei (no common name).
    (37) Hynobius katoi (Akaishi sansho-uo).
    (38) Hynobius kimurae (Hida salamander).
    (39) Hynobius leechii (northeastern China hynobiid salamander).
    (40) Hynobius lichenatus (northeast salamander).
    (41) Hynobius maoershanensis (no common name).
    (42) Hynobius naevius (blotched salamander).
    (43) Hynobius nebulosus (misty salamander).
    (44) Hynobius nigrescens (black salamander).
    (45) Hynobius okiensis (Oki salamander).
    (46) Hynobius osumiensis (Osumi-sanshouo).
    (47) Hynobius quelpaertensis (no common name).
    (48) Hynobius retardatus (Hokkaido salamander).
    (49) Hynobius shinichisatoi (Sobo-sanshouo).
    (50) Hynobius sonani (Sonan's hynobiid).
    (51) Hynobius stejnegeri (Bekko Sansho-uo).
    (52) Hynobius takedai (Hokuriku Sansho-uo).
    (53) Hynobius tokyoensis (Tokyo salamander).
    (54) Hynobius tsuensis (Tsushima Sansho-uo).
    (55) Hynobius turkestanicus (Turkestanian salamander).
    (56) Hynobius yangi (no common name).
    (57) Hynobius yatsui (no common name).
    (58) Hynobius yiwuensis (Yiwu hynobiid).
    (59) Ichthyosaura alpestris (alpine newt).
    (60) Lissotriton boscai (Bosca's newt).
    (61) Lissotriton helveticus (palmate newt).
    (62) Lissotriton italicus (Italian newt).
    (63) Lissotriton kosswigi (Triton pontue de Kosswig).
    (64) Lissotriton lantzi (no common name).
    (65) Lissotriton montandoni (Carpathian newt).
    (66) Lissotriton vulgaris (smooth newt).
    (67) Neurergus crocatus (no common name).
    (68) Neurergus derjugini or Neurergus microspilotus (Kurdistan 
newt).
    (69) Neurergus kaiseri (Lorestan newt, Luristan newt, emperor 
spotted newt, Zagros newt, Iranian harlequin newt, kaiser newt).
    (70) Neurergus strauchii (no common name).
    (71) Notophthalmus meridionalis (black-spotted newt).
    (72) Notophthalmus perstriatus (striped newt).
    (73) Notophthalmus viridescens (eastern newt).
    (74) Onychodactylus fischeri (long-tailed clawed salamander).
    (75) Onychodactylus fuscus (Tadami clawed salamander).
    (76) Onychodactylus intermedius (Bandai clawed salamander).
    (77) Onychodactylus japonicus (Japanese clawed salamander).
    (78) Onychodactylus kinneburi (Shikoku clawed salamander).
    (79) Onychodactylus koreanus (Korai-Sansyouo).
    (80) Onychodactylus nipponoborealis (Riben Bei Zhaoni).
    (81) Onychodactylus tsukubaensis (Tsukuba clawed salamander).
    (82) Onychodactylus zhangyapingi (Jilin Zhaoni).
    (83) Onychodactylus zhaoermii (Liaoning).
    (84) Paramesotriton caudopunctatus (spot-tailed warty newt).
    (85) Paramesotriton chinensis (Chinese warty newt).
    (86) Paramesotriton deloustali (no common name).
    (87) Paramesotriton fuzhongensis (no common name).
    (88) Paramesotriton guanxiensis (Guangxi warty newt).
    (89) Paramesotriton hongkongensis (no common name).
    (90) Paramesotriton labiatus (spotless stout newt).
    (91) Paramesotriton longliensis (no common name).
    (92) Paramesotriton maolanensis (no common name).
    (93) Paramesotriton qixilingensis (no common name).
    (94) Paramesotriton wulingensis (no common name).
    (95) Paramesotriton yunwuensis (no common name).
    (96) Paramesotriton zhijinensis (no common name).
    (97) Plethodon ainsworthi (Catahoula salamander, bay springs 
salamander).
    (98) Plethodon albagula (western slimy salamander).
    (99) Plethodon amplus (Blue Ridge gray-cheeked salamander).
    (100) Plethodon angusticlavius (Ozark salamander, Ozark zigzag 
salamander).
    (101) Plethodon asupak (Scott Bar salamander).
    (102) Plethodon aureolus (Tellico salamander).
    (103) Plethodon caddoensis (Caddo Mountain salamander).
    (104) Plethodon chattahoochee (Chattahoochee slimy salamander).
    (105) Plethodon cheoah (Cheoah bald salamander).
    (106) Plethodon chlorobryonis (Atlantic Coast slimy salamander).
    (107) Plethodon cinereus (eastern red-backed salamander, redback 
salamander, salamandre ray[eacute]e, red-backed salamander).
    (108) Plethodon cylindraceus (white-spotted slimy salamander).
    (109) Plethodon dorsalis (zigzag salamander, northern zigzag 
salamander).

[[Page 1556]]

    (110) Plethodon dunni (Dunn's salamander).
    (111) Plethodon electromorphus (northern ravine salamander).
    (112) Plethodon elongatus (Del Norte salamander).
    (113) Plethodon fourchensis (Fourche Mountain salamander).
    (114) Plethodon glutinosus (slimy salamander, northern slimy 
salamander).
    (115) Plethodon grobmani (southeastern slimy salamander).
    (116) Plethodon hoffmani (valley and ridge salamander).
    (117) Plethodon hubrichti (Peaks of Otter salamander).
    (118) Plethodon idahoensis (Coeur d'Alene salamander).
    (119) Plethodon jordani (Appalachian salamander, red-cheeked 
salamander, Jordan's salamander).
    (120) Plethodon kentucki (Kentucky salamander, Cumberland Plateau 
salamander).
    (121) Plethodon kiamichi (Kiamichi slimy salamander).
    (122) Plethodon kisatchie (Louisiana slimy salamander).
    (123) Plethodon larselli (Larch Mountain salamander).
    (124) Plethodon meridianus (South Mountain gray-cheeked salamander, 
southern gray-cheeked salamander).
    (125) Plethodon metcalfi (southern gray-cheeked salamander).
    (126) Plethodon mississippi (Mississippi slimy salamander).
    (127) Plethodon montanus (northern gray-cheeked salamander).
    (128) Plethodon neomexicanus (Jemez Mountains salamander).
    (129) Plethodon nettingi (Cheat Mountain salamander).
    (130) Plethodon ocmulgee (Ocmulgee slimy salamander).
    (131) Plethodon ouachitae (Rich Mountain salamander).
    (132) Plethodon petraeus (Pigeon Mountain salamander).
    (133) Plethodon punctatus (white-spotted salamander, cow knob 
salamander).
    (134) Plethodon richmondi (southern ravine salamander, ravine 
salamander).
    (135) Plethodon savannah (Savannah slimy salamander).
    (136) Plethodon sequoyah (Sequoyah slimy salamander).
    (137) Plethodon serratus (southern red-backed salamander).
    (138) Plethodon shenandoah (Shenandoah salamander).
    (139) Plethodon sherando (Big Levels salamander).
    (140) Plethodon shermani (red-legged salamander).
    (141) Plethodon stormi (Siskiyou Mountains salamander).
    (142) Plethodon teyahalee (Southern Appalachian salamander).
    (143) Plethodon vandykei (Van Dyke's salamander).
    (144) Plethodon variolatus (South Carolina slimy salamander).
    (145) Plethodon vehiculum (western red-backed salamander).
    (146) Plethodon ventralis (southern zigzag salamander).
    (147) Plethodon virginia (Shenandoah Mountain salamander).
    (148) Plethodon websteri (Webster's salamander).
    (149) Plethodon wehrlei (Wehrle's salamander).
    (150) Plethodon welleri (Weller's salamander).
    (151) Plethodon yonahlossee (Yonahlossee salamander).
    (152) Pleurodeles nebulosus (no common name).
    (153) Pleurodeles poireti (Algerian newt).
    (154) Pleurodeles waltl (Spanish newt).
    (155) Salamandra algira (Algerian salamander).
    (156) Salamandra atra (alpine salamander).
    (157) Salamandra corsica (Corsican fire salamander).
    (158) Salamandra infraimmaculata (no common name).
    (159) Salamandra lanzai (Lanza's alpine salamander, Salamandra di 
Lanza).
    (160) Salamandra salamandra (fire salamander).
    (161) Salamandrella keyserlingii (Siberian newt).
    (162) Salamandrella tridactyla (no common name).
    (163) Salamandrina perspicillata (northern spectacled salamander).
    (164) Salamandrina terdigitata (southern spectacled salamander).
    (165) Siren intermedia (lesser siren).
    (166) Siren lacertina (greater siren).
    (167) Taricha granulosa (rough-skinned newt).
    (168) Taricha rivularis (red-bellied newt).
    (169) Taricha sierrae (Sierra newt).
    (170) Taricha torosa (California newt).
    (171) Triturus carnifex (Italian crested newt).
    (172) Triturus cristatus (great crested newt).
    (173) Triturus dobrogicus (Danube crested newt).
    (174) Triturus hongkongensis (no common name)
    (175) Triturus ivanbureschi (Balkan-Anatolian crested newt, 
Buresch's crested newt).
    (176) Triturus karelinii (Southern crested newt).
    (177) Triturus macedonicus (no common name).
    (178) Triturus marmoratus (marbled newt).
    (179) Triturus pygmaeus (pygmy marbled newt).
    (180) Triturus vittatus (no common name).
    (181) Tylototriton anguliceps (angular-headed newt).
    (182) Tylototriton asperrimus (black knobby newt).
    (183) Tylototriton broadoridgus (no common name).
    (184) Tylototriton dabienicus (no common name).
    (185) Tylototriton daweishanensis (no common name).
    (186) Tylototriton hainanensis (Hainan knobby newt).
    (187) Tylototriton kweichowensis (red-tailed knobby newt).
    (188) Tylototriton liuyangensis (no common name).
    (189) Tylototriton lizhenchangi (Mangshan crocodile newt).
    (190) Tylototriton notialis (no common name).
    (191) Tylototriton panhai (no common name).
    (192) Tylototriton pseudoverrucosus (southern Sichuan crocodile 
newt).
    (193) Tylototriton shanjing (Yunnan newt).
    (194) Tylototriton shanorum (no common name).
    (195) Tylototriton taliangensis (Thailand newt).
    (196) Tylototriton uyenoi (no common name).
    (197) Tylototriton verrucosus (Himalayan newt).
    (198) Tylototriton vietnamensis (no common name).
    (199) Tylototriton wenxianensis (Wenxian knobby newt).
    (200) Tylototriton yangi (Tiannan crocodile newt).
    (201) Tylototriton ziegleri (Ziegler's crocodile newt).
    (b) Upon the filing of a written declaration with the District 
Director of Customs at the port of entry as required under Sec.  14.61 
of this chapter, all other species of amphibians may be imported, 
transported, and possessed in captivity, without a permit, for 
scientific, medical, education, exhibition, or propagating purposes, 
but no such amphibians or any progeny or eggs thereof may be released 
into the wild except by the State wildlife conservation agency having 
jurisdiction over the area of release or by persons having prior 
written permission for release from such agency.

    Dated: December 30, 2015.
Michael J. Bean,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. 2016-00452 Filed 1-12-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4333-15-P



                                                  1534             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                                        If . . .                                                                       Then include . . .

                                                             *                    *                     *                        *                  *                     *                *
                                                  (j) the estimated value of the acquisition exceeds $10 million ................ 52.222–24 Pre-award On-site Equal Opportunity Compliance Evalua-
                                                                                                                                     tion.
                                                  (k) the contracting officer requires cost or pricing data for work or serv- 52.215–10 Price Reduction for Defective Certified Cost or Pricing Data.
                                                     ices exceeding the threshold identified in FAR 15.403–4.                      52.215–12 Subcontractor Certified Cost or Pricing Data.

                                                            *                       *                       *                          *                       *                      *               *



                                                  [FR Doc. 2016–00475 Filed 1–12–16; 8:45 am]             DATES:  This interim rule is effective as                  the offspring or eggs of any of the
                                                  BILLING CODE 6820–161–P                                 of January 28, 2016. Interested persons                    foregoing that are injurious to human
                                                                                                          are invited to submit written comments                     beings, to the interests of agriculture,
                                                                                                          on this interim rule on or before March                    horticulture, or forestry, or to the
                                                  DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR                              14, 2016                                                   wildlife or wildlife resources of the
                                                                                                          ADDRESSES: You may submit comments                         United States.
                                                  Fish and Wildlife Service                               by any of the following methods:                              We have determined that salamanders
                                                                                                             • Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://                   that can carry the fungus
                                                  50 CFR Part 16                                          www.regulations.gov. Search for Docket                     Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans
                                                                                                          No. FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–0005 and                               (Bsal) are injurious to wildlife and
                                                  RIN 1018–BA77
                                                                                                          follow the instructions for submitting                     wildlife resources of the United States.
                                                  [Docket No. FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–0005;                       comments.                                                  This determination was based on a
                                                  FXFR13360900000–156–FF09F14000]                            • Mail, Hand Delivery, or Courier:                      review of the literature and an
                                                                                                          Public Comments Processing, Attn:                          evaluation under the criteria for
                                                  Injurious Wildlife Species; Listing                     FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–0005; Division of                          injuriousness by the Service. The
                                                  Salamanders Due to Risk of                              Policy, Performance, and Management                        salamander species listed by this
                                                  Salamander Chytrid Fungus                               Programs; United States Fish and                           interim rule are those found within a
                                                  AGENCY:   Fish and Wildlife Service,                    Wildlife Service; MS: BPHC; 5275                           genus for which we have confirmation
                                                  Interior.                                               Leesburg Pike; Falls Church, VA 22041–                     that at least one species in that genus is
                                                  ACTION: Interim rule; request for                       3803.                                                      a carrier of Bsal, and there is no
                                                  comments; notice of availability of                        We will not accept email or faxes. We                   countervailing conclusive evidence
                                                  economic analysis.                                      will post all comments on http://                          suggesting that some species within the
                                                                                                          www.regulations.gov. This generally                        genus are not carriers. We find that, due
                                                  SUMMARY:    The U.S. Fish and Wildlife                  means that we will post any personal                       to shared characteristics by species
                                                  Service is amending its regulations                     information you provide us (see                            within a genus, other species within
                                                  under the Lacey Act to add all species                  Comments on the Content of the Interim                     these genera are also highly likely to be
                                                  of salamanders from 20 genera, of which                 Rule for more information). All                            carriers of Bsal. Although additional
                                                  there are 201 species, to the list of                   submissions received must include                          salamander species could be at risk from
                                                  injurious amphibians. With this interim                 ‘‘Docket No. FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–                              Bsal infection or could serve as a carrier,
                                                  rule, both importation into the United                  0005’’ for this rulemaking. For detailed                   we are not listing species in those
                                                  States and interstate transportation                    instructions on submitting comments                        genera because they have not yet been
                                                  between States, the District of Columbia,               and additional information on the                          tested.
                                                  the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or                     rulemaking process, see Comments on                           The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
                                                  any territory or possession of the United               the Content of the Interim Rule.                           (Service, USFWS, or we) is amending its
                                                  States of any live or dead specimen,                       Docket: For access to the docket to                     regulations under the Lacey Act to add
                                                  including parts, of these 20 genera of                  read background documents or                               to the list of injurious wildlife all
                                                  salamanders are prohibited, except by                   comments received, go to http://                           species of live and dead specimens from
                                                  permit for zoological, educational,                     www.regulations.gov and find Docket                        20 genera, including body parts, from
                                                  medical, or scientific purposes (in                     No. FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–0005.                                  the amphibian order Caudata, which
                                                  accordance with permit conditions) or                   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                           includes animals commonly referred to
                                                  by Federal agencies without a permit                    Jason Goldberg or Susan Jewell,                            as salamanders, newts, and other names
                                                  solely for their own use. This action is                Injurious Wildlife Listing Coordinators,                   (hereafter, salamanders). The purpose of
                                                  necessary to protect the interests of                   United States Fish and Wildlife Service,                   listing these species as injurious
                                                  wildlife and wildlife resources from the                Branch of Aquatic Invasive Species; MS:                    wildlife is to prevent the introduction,
                                                  introduction, establishment, and spread                 FAC; 5275 Leesburg Pike; Falls Church,                     establishment, and spread of the fungus
                                                  of the chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium                  VA 22041–3803 telephone 703–358–                           (Bsal) in the wild in the United States.
                                                  salamandrivorans into ecosystems of                     1715. If you use a telecommunications                      The fungus affects only salamanders,
                                                  the United States. The fungus affects                   device for the deaf (TDD), please call the                 has lethal effects on many salamander
                                                  salamanders, with lethal effects on                     Federal Information Relay Service                          species, and is not yet known to be
                                                  many species, and is not yet known to                   (FIRS) at 800–877–8339.                                    found in the United States.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  be found in the United States. Because                  SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                                    The United States has the greatest
                                                  of the devastating effect that we expect                                                                           diversity of salamanders in the world,
                                                  the fungus will have on native U.S.                     Executive Summary                                          the salamanders are a vital part of native
                                                  salamanders if introduced and,                            Under the Lacey Act (18 U.S.C. 42, as                    ecosystems, and numerous salamander
                                                  therefore, the need to act immediately to               amended), the Secretary of the Interior                    populations are at risk of endangerment
                                                  prevent the disease from being                          may list by regulation those wild                          from Bsal. Experience with the
                                                  introduced into the United States, the                  mammals, wild birds, fish, mollusks,                       introduction of Bsal into the
                                                  Service is publishing this interim rule.                crustaceans, amphibians, reptiles, and                     Netherlands and associated deleterious


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                            1535

                                                  effects to native salamanders, along with               a host and causing extensive damage to                 localities, not merely large territories,
                                                  laboratory research, confirms that Bsal                 wildlife and wildlife resources,                       where they have not previously existed.
                                                  can be introduced and cause substantial                 including federally endangered and                     See 16 U.S.C. 701. Third, the legislative
                                                  and immediate harm in the United                        threatened species. Eradicating Bsal                   history of Congress’s many amendments
                                                  States.                                                 would be extremely difficult once                      to the Lacey Act since its enactment in
                                                     A risk assessment conducted by the                   introduced and established, the ability                1900 shows that Congress intended,
                                                  U.S. Geological Survey concluded that                   to rehabilitate disturbed ecosystems is                from the very beginning, for the Service
                                                  the potential for Bsal introduction into                expected to be low, and controlling Bsal               to regulate the interstate shipment of
                                                  the United States is high, the United                   is not practical. Prophylactic treatments              certain injurious wildlife. Finally,
                                                  States has suitable conditions for Bsal                 for imports of salamanders to manage                   recent Congresses have made clear that
                                                  survival, and the consequences of                       Bsal are in development but are not yet                Congress interprets 18 U.S.C. 42(a)(1) as
                                                  introduction into the United States are                 fully tested or feasible.                              prohibiting interstate transport of
                                                  expected to be severe and occur across                     We are amending our regulations                     injurious wildlife between the states
                                                  a wide range of the United States. The                  under an interim rule and are foregoing                within the continental United States. In
                                                  main pathway for the global spread of                   a proposed rule. The interim rule will                 amending § 42(a)(1) to add bighead carp
                                                  Bsal is the international trade in                      take effect on the date specified above                and zebra mussels as injurious wildlife
                                                  salamanders. The ability and                            in DATES, with public comment to                       without making other changes to the
                                                  effectiveness of measures to prevent or                 conclude as set forth in DATES. Based on               provision, Congress repeated and
                                                  control Bsal is currently low. Trade in                 public comments received, the interim                  ratified the Service’s interpretation of
                                                  wildlife occurs on a global scale, and                  rule may be revised. If Bsal is                        the statute as prohibiting all interstate
                                                  amphibians are one of the most                          introduced into the United States, it is               transport of injurious species.
                                                  commonly traded animals. Therefore,                     expected to have negative effects on                      The prohibitions on importation and
                                                  listing the 20 genera will be effective at              many species of native salamanders. No                 all interstate transportation are both
                                                  reducing the likelihood that Bsal enters                conclusive evidence exists that suggests               necessary to prevent the introduction,
                                                  the United States and presents a threat                 that Bsal is found in the United States.               establishment, and spread of injurious
                                                  to native salamander species.                           Therefore, the opportunity exists to take              species that threaten human health or
                                                     Of the 190 native U.S. salamander                    urgent action now to prevent the                       the interests of agriculture, horticulture,
                                                  species, at least 2 species are lethally                introduction of Bsal. Listing 20 genera                forestry, or the wildlife or wildlife
                                                  vulnerable to Bsal and at least 1 is                    of salamanders as injurious wildlife is                resources of the United States. By listing
                                                  tolerant of Bsal infection. At least four               an essential step in helping to keep Bsal              the 20 genera as injurious wildlife, both
                                                  are resistant to Bsal infection, of which               out of the United States by preventing                 importation and interstate
                                                  one is expected to be a carrier because                 introduction of salamanders that serve                 transportation of any live or dead
                                                  Bsal was able to invade the skin of that                as carriers of the fungus and are capable              specimen, including parts, is prohibited,
                                                  species long enough to move or transmit                 of introducing it to the United States.                except by permit (in accordance with
                                                  the fungus to other salamanders. In                     This interim rule lists some species that              conditions) for zoological, educational,
                                                  addition, researchers have identified a                 are currently in trade and some that are               medical, or scientific purposes or by
                                                  non-native species that is lethally                     not; the focus is on species that are                  Federal agencies without a permit solely
                                                  vulnerable to Bsal that is found within                 likely carriers of Bsal and capable of                 for their own use.
                                                  a fifth genus that also includes native                 transmitting it to the same or other                      The Service conducted an economic
                                                  species. On this basis, the Service finds               species.                                               analysis and regulatory flexibility
                                                  that at least 67 native species from 5                     Consistent with the statutory language              analysis as required under the
                                                  genera are carriers of Bsal.                            and congressional intent, it is the                    rulemaking process. The draft economic
                                                     Native salamander species that                       Service’s longstanding and continued                   analysis considers five alternatives: (1)
                                                  demonstrate limited disease under                       position that the Lacey Act, 18 U.S.C.                 No action; (2) list species that were
                                                  experimental conditions may                             42, prohibits both the importation into                shown by Martel et al. (2014) and other
                                                  demonstrate more severe clinical                        the United States and all interstate                   sources to be carriers of Bsal; (3) list all
                                                  disease when infection is combined                      transportation between States, the                     species in genera where there is at least
                                                  with additional stressors in the wild.                  District of Columbia, the                              one confirmed carrier and all species in
                                                  We concluded from our analysis that the                 Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any                    the genus are likely to be a carrier, and
                                                  introduction of Bsal into the United                    territory or possession of the United                  there is no countervailing conclusive
                                                  States can cause significant, adverse,                  States, including interstate                           evidence suggesting that some species
                                                  population-level effects in native                      transportation between States within the               within the genus are not carriers; (4) list
                                                  species. As keystone species, loss of                   Continental United States, of injurious                all salamanders; and (5) require a health
                                                  salamanders from Bsal infection would                   wildlife, regardless of the preliminary                certificate stating that the animal being
                                                  have significant impacts on ecosystems,                 injunction decision in U.S. Association                moved is free of Bsal, in lieu of or in
                                                  including food webs and nutrient                        of Reptile Keepers v. Jewell, No. 13–                  addition to listing.
                                                  cycling.                                                2007 (D.D.C. May 12, 2015). The                           The annual retail sales loss of listing
                                                     All 20 genera of salamanders, plus                   Service’s interpretation of 18 U.S.C.                  201 species, based on the 20 genera
                                                  any new species that may be identified                  42(a)(1) finds support in the plain                    listed, is estimated to be $3.9 million, of
                                                  in the future within the genera listed by               language of the statute, the Lacey Act’s               which $2.3 million are losses to small
                                                  this interim rule, are found to be                      purpose, legislative history, and                      businesses. Impacts per small business
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  injurious. Even if a salamander found to                congressional ratification. First, the                 may be as high as $453,000 for
                                                  be injurious could not establish a                      statute’s use of the disjunctive ‘‘or’’ to             importers and $23,000 for domestic
                                                  population in the wild, an infected                     separate the listed geographic entities                breeders. The cost estimate represents
                                                  salamander in captivity can still                       indicates that each location has                       the loss of revenue from listing the
                                                  transmit Bsal to native populations if                  independent significance. Second,                      species to companies or individuals
                                                  that salamander escapes or if material                  Congress enacted the Lacey Act in 1900                 involved in the importation, interstate
                                                  touching it is disposed of improperly.                  for the purpose of, among other things,                movement, or final consumer sales of
                                                  Bsal is capable of surviving outside of                 regulating the introduction of species in              salamanders that are imported and


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                                                  1536             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  moved between States. No significant                    crustaceans, amphibians, reptiles, or the              also received a petition from the Center
                                                  economic impact on a substantial                        offspring or eggs of any of the foregoing              for Biological Diversity and SAVE THE
                                                  number of small entities is anticipated.                found to be injurious to human beings,                 FROGS! on May 18, 2015, to take action
                                                  The economic loss including direct,                     to the interests of agriculture,                       to prevent the introduction of Bsal into
                                                  indirect, and induced effects from loss                 horticulture, forestry, or to wildlife or              the United States (Center for Biological
                                                  in revenue to pet stores is estimated to                the wildlife resources of the United                   Diversity and SAVE THE FROGS! 2015).
                                                  be $10.0 million. Benefits from                         States. Salamanders are amphibians,                    In response to the scientific findings,
                                                  decreases in risk from Bsal for                         and the Service has the authority to list              letters to the Service, and the petition
                                                  ecological, commercial, recreational,                   them under the Lacey Act when it finds                 the Service initiated a review to
                                                  and non-use values are not quantifiable.                that they are injurious to one or more of              determine whether salamanders capable
                                                  The benefits from these additional                      the statutory interests. We may list                   of carrying Bsal should be listed as
                                                  factors are unknown, but are certainly                  species before they are introduced into                injurious. Based on the Service’s genus-
                                                  positive.                                               the United States and, therefore, are able             level carrier extrapolation from data
                                                     From 2004 to 2014, nearly 2.5 million                to harm interests of the United States as              obtained from Martel et al. (2014), and
                                                  live salamanders of at least 59 species                 defined under the Act. We have                         because Bsal has not been found in the
                                                  were imported into the United States.                   determined that salamanders that                       United States (Martel et al. 2014; Muletz
                                                  The 228,000 average annually imported                   potentially carry Bsal are injurious to                et al. 2014; Bales et al. 2015), the
                                                  salamanders are primarily for the pet                   wildlife and wildlife resources of the                 opportunity exists to take urgent action
                                                  trade. Fewer than 100 total businesses,                 United States. With this interim rule, we              to prevent the introduction of Bsal. This
                                                  institutions, and individuals imported                  are attempting to prevent the                          action will help safeguard U.S. wildlife
                                                  salamanders over this time period                       introduction and subsequent                            and natural resources, while providing
                                                  (USFWS OLE 2015) for a retail value of                  establishment of the chytrid fungus,                   time for monitoring and other measures
                                                  $44 million dollars. Salamander imports                 Bsal, which is a pathogen capable of                   to be developed that may allow safe
                                                  and the number of businesses declined                   causing significant harm to native                     trade in salamanders to resume later.
                                                  during this period, which may lead to                   salamander species and their                              We reviewed Bsal and the salamander
                                                  an overestimation of the economic                       ecosystems. As described below under                   species that carry this fungus using the
                                                  losses due to the uncertainty of industry               Role of Salamanders in the Ecosystem,                  Injurious Wildlife Evaluation Criteria,
                                                  and consumer responses over the time                    the benefits that these native                         described in more detail as part of this
                                                  period used. The timeframe of the trade                 salamander species provide to                          interim rule in Factors That Contribute
                                                  analysis does not make a difference                     ecosystems in ensuring ecosystem                       to Salamanders Being Considered
                                                  from a biological perspective of risk.                  health and stability, and, in turn, the                Injurious, which the Service developed
                                                  Species are being listed regardless of                  ecosystem services that benefit people,                to evaluate whether a species qualifies
                                                  whether they are in trade. The                          are significant.                                       as injurious under the Act. The resulting
                                                  alternatives are based on the level of                     Martel et al. (2014) and Cunningham                 analysis serves as a basis for the
                                                  perceived risk, which is informed by the                et al. (2015) (as explained further in                 Service’s regulatory decision regarding
                                                  current state of scientific knowledge.                  Chytridcrisis (2015b)) identified some of              injurious wildlife species listings. This
                                                     This interim rule is effective as of the             the salamander species that can carry                  interim rule finds that Bsal is a
                                                  date specified above in DATES. Interested               Bsal and are at risk from infection. The               significant threat to the wildlife and
                                                  persons are invited to submit written                   research tested a limited number of the                wildlife resources of the United States
                                                  comments on this interim rule on or                     approximately 681 known species of                     and lists 20 genera of salamanders that
                                                  before the date set forth in DATES.                     salamanders that exist worldwide and                   we have determined to be injurious
                                                                                                          found that not every species was                       because they are likely carriers of Bsal.
                                                  Background                                              negatively affected by the fungus.                        Rulemaking under the Act is governed
                                                                                                          However, the results clearly indicate a                by the Administrative Procedure Act
                                                  Purpose of Listing as Injurious
                                                                                                          severe threat for many species of                      (APA) (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.). The process
                                                     The purpose of listing the 20 genera                 salamanders that will be negatively                    of issuing a proposed rule, providing the
                                                  of live and dead specimens, including                   affected by this pathogen, including 2 of              opportunity for public comment, and
                                                  parts, from the order Caudata commonly                  the 7 species tested that are also native              completing a final rule can take a
                                                  referred to as salamanders, newts, and                  to the United States and were found to                 significant amount of time to complete.
                                                  other names (hereafter, salamanders) as                 be lethally vulnerable to the fungus.                  During this time, the species proposed
                                                  injurious wildlife is to prevent the                    Recent research has highlighted                        for listing are still allowed to be
                                                  accidental or intentional introduction of               concerns of emerging infectious disease                imported and transported, offering
                                                  salamanders into the United States that                 of fungal origin that can cause a                      increased opportunities for
                                                  are expected to serve as carriers of                    significant loss in biodiversity and                   introduction, establishment, and harm.
                                                  Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans                       ecosystem services (Fisher et al. 2012);               Under section 553(b)(3)(B) of the APA,
                                                  (hereafter, Bsal), a fungus that poses a                Bsal appears to be the latest.                         however, a proposed rule is not required
                                                  risk to native species of salamanders. If                  The research results about Bsal and                 ‘‘when the agency for good cause finds
                                                  Bsal is introduced into wild populations                concerns about emerging infectious                     (and incorporates the finding and a brief
                                                  of native salamanders, we expect it to                  disease, especially Spitzen-van der                    statement of reasons therefor in the
                                                  cause significant damage to wildlife and                Sluijs et al. (2013), Martel et al. (2013),            rules issued) that notice and public
                                                  the wildlife resources of the United                    and Martel et al. (2014), have generated               procedure thereon are impracticable,
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                                                  States.                                                 a strong response from academia,                       unnecessary, or contrary to the public
                                                                                                          industry groups, and conservation and                  interest.’’ There is good cause to forgo
                                                  Need for the Interim Rule                               other organizations who have written                   notice and public comment on a
                                                    Under the Lacey Act (Act) (18 U.S.C.                  the Service seeking quick and decisive                 proposed rule in this instance and
                                                  42, as amended), the Service, through                   action to ensure Bsal does not have a                  instead take immediate action in the
                                                  the Secretary of the Interior, may                      similar impact on salamander                           form of an interim rule to help prevent
                                                  prescribe by regulation any wild                        populations that Batrachochytrium                      this fungus from being introduced,
                                                  mammals, wild birds, fish, mollusks,                    dendrobatidis (Bd) has had on frogs. We                established, or spread in the United


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1537

                                                  States. Providing notice and public                     develop clinical disease or increased                  in trade as well as some that are not. We
                                                  comment prior to implementing the                       severity of disease, respectively, when                have the authority under the Act to list
                                                  injurious wildlife prohibitions would be                infection is combined with additional                  certain species as injurious even if they
                                                  contrary to the public interest because                 stressors in the wild, as has been found               are not currently in trade or known to
                                                  of the need to take immediate action                    for other diseases, including those in                 exist in the United States.
                                                  due to the significant risk from Bsal. For              amphibians (Wobeser 2007; Kerby et al.                    The salamander species listed by this
                                                  these reasons, we also find good cause                  2011; Kiesecker 2011).                                 interim rule are those found within
                                                  in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3) to                   In the United States, Bsal has either               genera for which we have evidence that
                                                  make the interim rule effective less than               not been introduced, has been                          at least one species in that genus is a
                                                  30 days after the date of publication.                  introduced but has failed to establish, or             carrier of Bsal with no countervailing
                                                  Due to the significant risk of                          is present but has not been positively                 conclusive evidence that other species
                                                  introduction, establishment, and spread                 detected. Although we do not have any                  in that genus are not carriers. We
                                                  of Bsal in the United States, this interim              conclusive evidence showing that                       describe our rationale for this course of
                                                  rule will take effect 15 days after                     introductions have occurred, history                   action below under Classification and
                                                  publication in the Federal Register.                    from other pathogens similar to Bsal,                  Status as Carriers. Our decision-making
                                                  Based on prior experience, a shorter-                   such as Bd, however, suggests that the                 included the following considerations:
                                                  than-normal effective date will also help               fungus is likely to spread quickly                     All 20 genera of salamanders, plus any
                                                  reduce the risk that importers will rush                throughout the United States if it is not              new species identified within the genera
                                                  to import these species before the listing              prevented from being introduced.                       listed by this interim rule, are found to
                                                  becomes effective. For example, in the                  Moreover, efforts to control or eradicate              be injurious because suitable climate
                                                  case of snakeheads (Channidae), the                     introduced or established invasive                     exists in parts of the United States to
                                                  Service documented a nearly three-fold                  species and manage the costs they incur                support Bsal; even if a salamander listed
                                                  increase in the importation of                          to society are generally less effective                by this interim rule could not establish
                                                  snakeheads after the proposed rule was                  and more expensive and difficult than                  a population in the wild, an infected
                                                  first announced (67 FR 48855; July 26,                  efforts that prevent establishment                     salamander in captivity (or the water
                                                  2002) and before the final rule took                    (Leung et al. 2002; Finnoff et al. 2007).              and soil in which it came into contact)
                                                  effect, approximately two months later                  Prevention of invasive species is                      can transmit Bsal to native populations;
                                                  (67 FR 62202; October 4, 2002).                         typically the most cost-effective                      Bsal is capable of causing extensive
                                                  However, we also recognize that an                      measure to avoid the damage that such                  damage to wildlife and wildlife
                                                  immediate effective date is not practical               species cause (Leung et al. 2002; Lodge                resources, including federally
                                                  when live animals may be in transit on                  et al. 2006; Keller and Springborn 2014).              endangered and threatened species;
                                                  the day the interim rule takes effect. A                As noted in the National Invasive                      eradicating Bsal would be extremely
                                                  delay of 15 days before the interim rule                Species Management Plan, ‘‘prevention                  difficult once introduced and
                                                  goes into effect will allow for the                     is the first line of defense’’ and ‘‘can be            established; and controlling Bsal is not
                                                  reasonable completion of imports and                    the most cost effective approach because               practical.
                                                                                                          once a species becomes widespread,                        Although this interim rule takes effect
                                                  transports already in progress and give
                                                                                                          controlling it may require significant                 on the date specified above in DATES, it
                                                  wildlife inspectors and other law
                                                                                                          and sustained expenditures’’ (National                 will still provide the public with a
                                                  enforcement officers time to enforce the
                                                                                                          Invasive Species Council 2008).                        period of time to comment on the listing
                                                  interim rule.
                                                                                                             If Bsal has unknowingly been                        and associated documents. The final
                                                     Experience with the introduction of                  introduced but failed to establish for                 rule will contain responses to comments
                                                  Bsal into the Netherlands and associated                unknown reasons, it is still important to              received on the interim rule, state the
                                                  deleterious effects to native                           take action now because additional                     final decision, and provide the
                                                  salamanders, along with laboratory                      introductions increase the likelihood of               justification for that decision.
                                                  research, confirms that Bsal can be                     establishment and harm. As more
                                                  introduced, establish, and spread and                                                                          Listing Species That Carry Pathogens
                                                                                                          salamanders that can carry Bsal are
                                                  cause substantial and immediate harm                    imported into the United States, the                      Pathogens are agents such as viruses,
                                                  in the United States (Spitzen-van der                   probability increases that one or more of              bacteria, and fungi that cause diseases
                                                  Sluijs et al. 2013; Martel et al. 2014;                 those salamanders, through a                           in animals and plants. The Service does
                                                  Cunningham et al. 2015; Chytridcrisis                   phenomenon called propagule pressure                   not have the direct authority under the
                                                  2015b). The United States leads all other               or ‘‘introduction effort,’’ described in               Act to list pathogens as injurious. We
                                                  countries in salamander diversity                       Lockwood et al. (2005) as a measure of                 also cannot list or regulate fomites
                                                  (Partners in Amphibian and Reptile                      the number of nonnative individuals                    (materials such as water that can
                                                  Conservation, Stein and Kutner 2000).                   released into a region, will give Bsal the             transmit pathogens). However, wild
                                                  Based on scientific evidence, we know                   opportunity to establish and spread.                   mammals, wild birds, fish, mollusks,
                                                  that the fungus is lethal to at least 2                    Listing the salamanders as injurious                crustaceans, amphibians, or reptiles that
                                                  salamander species native to the United                 will help keep Bsal out of the United                  are hosts to pathogens, such as viruses,
                                                  States. Of the 190 native U.S. species,                 States by preventing the importation of                bacteria, or fungi that cause disease, can
                                                  we find that at least 67 species are                    salamanders capable of carrying the                    be injurious if the likelihood, scope, and
                                                  carriers and 20 are not carriers. The                   fungus and serving as the vector of                    severity of effects significantly affect
                                                  remaining 103 species have not been                     introduction into U.S. ecosystems,                     one or more of the interests listed in the
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                                                  evaluated, and many of these species                    thereby causing injurious effects                      Act. Even if the host species cannot
                                                  may also be affected by this potentially                consistent with the Act. Given the                     establish populations in the wild, it can
                                                  deadly fungus. While the Service’s                      expected consequences that Bsal’s                      present significant risk if the pathogen
                                                  greatest concern will be for species that               introduction would have to wildlife and                the host is carrying can infect wildlife
                                                  are lethally vulnerable to Bsal,                        wildlife resources of the United States,               or wildlife resources or affect human
                                                  salamander species known to be tolerant                 we are listing species that we have                    beings or the interests of agriculture,
                                                  of or susceptible to Bsal infection under               determined to be injurious. This interim               horticulture, or forestry in the United
                                                  experimental conditions may also                        rule lists some species that are currently             States. Among other impacts, diseases


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                                                  1538             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  caused by introduced pathogens reduce                   will cause harm to human beings,                          • Impacts to human beings, forestry,
                                                  biodiversity (the variety of different                  agricultural or forestry interests, or                 horticulture, and agriculture; and
                                                  types of life on earth) and have been                   natural systems. Furthermore, a species                   • Wildlife or habitat damages that
                                                  implicated in the local extinction of                   does not have to be currently imported                 may occur from control measures.
                                                  many animal taxa (Daszak et al. 2000).                  or present in the wild in the United                      (2) Factors that reduce the likelihood
                                                     We have previously listed species                    States for the Service to list it as                   of the species being considered as
                                                  under the Act that serve as hosts to                    injurious. For species not yet imported                injurious:
                                                  pathogens, as in the case of fish in the                into the United States, the objective of                  • Ability to prevent escape and
                                                  salmon family Salmonidae (32 FR                         listing is to prevent that species’                    establishment;
                                                  20655; December 21, 1967, 33 FR 6827;                   importation and likely introduction and                   • Potential to eradicate or manage
                                                  May 4, 1968, and 58 FR 58976;                           possible establishment and spread in                   established populations (for example,
                                                  November 5, 1993). Members of the                       the wild, thereby preventing injurious                 making organisms sterile);
                                                  family Salmonidae (salmon, trout, and                   effects consistent with the purposes of                   • Ability to rehabilitate disturbed
                                                  char) are not injurious provided they are               the Act. For species that are present in               ecosystems;
                                                  free from certain pathogens. However,                   the United States, the Act prevents the                   • Ability to prevent or control the
                                                  salmon that are alive or are dead and                   further introduction, establishment, or                spread of pathogens or parasites; and
                                                  uneviscerated (internal organs have not                 spread of the species by prohibiting                      • Any potential ecological benefits to
                                                  been removed) without a health                          interstate transport.                                  introduction.
                                                  certificate declaring that the fish are                    Importation into the United States of                  In the case of this interim rule, the
                                                  pathogen free are injurious to wildlife                 an injurious species is prohibited.                    issue is not whether a given salamander
                                                  and wildlife resources due to the risk of               Transportation between the States, the                 species is invasive, but rather the role of
                                                  transmitting pathogens that cause                       District of Columbia, the                              salamanders in introducing the Bsal
                                                  devastating diseases in fish. Although                  Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, or any                    fungus into the United States and the
                                                  prophylactic treatments for imports of                  territory or possession of the United                  scope and severity of effects caused by
                                                  salamanders to manage Bsal are in                       States of an injurious species is also                 salamanders that are carriers of Bsal on
                                                  development, they are not yet fully                     prohibited. These prohibited activities                human beings or the interests of
                                                  tested or feasible.                                     may be undertaken by permit for                        agriculture, horticulture, or forestry, or
                                                                                                          zoological, educational, medical, or                   the wildlife or wildlife resources of the
                                                  Listing and Evaluation Process                                                                                 United States.
                                                                                                          scientific purposes (in accordance with
                                                     The regulations contained in part 16                 permit regulations at 50 CFR 16.22), or                Comments on the Content of the Interim
                                                  of title 50 of the Code of Federal                      by Federal agencies without a permit                   Rule
                                                  Regulations (CFR) implement the Lacey                   solely for their own use, upon filing a
                                                  Act and include the lists of all species                written declaration with the District                     We are soliciting public comments
                                                  determined by the Service or by                         Director of Customs and the U.S. Fish                  and supporting data on the draft
                                                  Congress to be injurious. Under the                     and Wildlife Service inspector at the                  economic analysis, the draft regulatory
                                                  terms of the Act, the Secretary of the                  port of entry. The Act does not regulate               flexibility analysis, and this interim rule
                                                  Interior may prescribe by regulation                    intrastate transport (transport within a               to add all species from 20 genera of
                                                  those wild mammals, wild birds, fish,                   State or territory) or possession of                   salamanders to the list of injurious
                                                  mollusks, crustaceans, amphibians,                      injurious species. Any regulations                     amphibians under the Act. We will
                                                  reptiles, and the offspring or eggs of any              pertaining to the transport or use of                  review the public comments for the
                                                  of the foregoing that are injurious to                  these species within a particular State or             preparation of our final rule. The draft
                                                  humans, to the interests of agriculture,                U.S. territory are the responsibility of               economic analysis and regulatory
                                                  horticulture, or forestry, or to the                    that State or territory.                               flexibility analysis and this interim rule
                                                  wildlife or wildlife resources of the                      The Service uses criteria, identified               will be available on http://
                                                  United States. The lists of injurious                   below, to evaluate whether a species                   www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
                                                  wildlife species are found at 50 CFR                    does or does not qualify as injurious                  FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–0005. You may
                                                  16.11–16.15. Under these regulations,                   under the Act. The analysis that is                    submit your comments and materials
                                                  species are added to the lists of                       developed using these criteria serves as               concerning this interim rule by one of
                                                  injurious wildlife to protect statutorily               a general basis for the Service’s                      the methods listed in ADDRESSES. We
                                                  defined interests from potential and                    regulatory decision regarding injurious                will not accept comments sent by email
                                                  known negative effects. Most species                    wildlife species listings. Biologists and              or fax or to an address not listed in
                                                  listed have the capacity to establish                   risk managers within the Service who                   ADDRESSES.
                                                  populations in the wild, spread, and                    are knowledgeable about a species that                    We will post your entire comment—
                                                  cause harm. However, a species can be                   is being evaluated assess both the                     including your personal identifying
                                                  listed based solely on its capacity to                  factors that contribute to and the factors             information—on http://
                                                  cause harm. As noted in the previous                    that reduce the likelihood of                          www.regulations.gov. If your written
                                                  section, dead, uneviscerated salmonids                  injuriousness.                                         comments provide personal identifying
                                                  without a health certificate are not                       (1) Factors that contribute to being                information, you may request at the top
                                                  capable of establishing in the United                   considered injurious:                                  of your document that we withhold this
                                                  States, but they are injurious because                     • The likelihood of release or escape;              information from public review.
                                                  the pathogens they may carry are                           • Potential to survive, become                      However, we cannot guarantee that we
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  harmful.                                                established, and spread;                               will be able to do so.
                                                     Under the Act, the Service can list                     • Impacts on wildlife resources or                     Comments and materials we receive,
                                                  species that are nonnative or indigenous                ecosystems through hybridization and                   as well as supporting documentation we
                                                  to the United States. In the case of an                 competition for food and habitats,                     used in preparing this interim rule, will
                                                  indigenous species, for example, the                    habitat degradation and destruction,                   be available for public inspection on
                                                  Service may find that it is injurious                   predation, and pathogen transfer;                      http://www.regulations.gov under
                                                  because its transport and release into                     • Impacts to threatened and                         Docket No. FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–0005,
                                                  another State outside the species’ range                endangered species and their habitats;                 or by appointment, during normal


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          1539

                                                  business hours at the Service’s office in               most appropriate ones accepted by the                  (no common name), appears in the U.S.
                                                  Falls Church, VA (see FOR FURTHER                       scientific community?                                  Fish and Wildlife Service’s Office of
                                                  INFORMATION CONTACT).                                     (14) What are relevant Federal, State,               Law Enforcement’s (USFWS OLE) Law
                                                     We are soliciting public comments                    or local rules that may duplicate,                     Enforcement Management Information
                                                  and supporting data to gain additional                  overlap, or conflict with the interim                  System (LEMIS) data (USFWS OLE
                                                  information, and we specifically seek                   rule?                                                  2015). LEMIS is an electronic database
                                                  comment on the following questions:                       We will also submit the rule for peer                utilized by all Service law enforcement
                                                     (1) How many of the species listed by                review concurrent with public                          offices, including Service Conservation
                                                  this rule are currently in production for               comments. In conducting peer review,                   Officers, Wildlife Inspectors, Refuge
                                                  wholesale or retail sale, and in how                    we will follow guidance from the Office                Officers, and Special Agents. LEMIS
                                                  many and which States?                                  of Management and Budget ‘‘Final                       serves as the portal in which all Service
                                                     (2) How many businesses sell one or                  Information Quality Bulletin for Peer                  wildlife violations are documented and
                                                  more of the species listed by this rule?                Review’’ (OMB 2004) and the Service’s                  intelligence is gathered and shared
                                                     (3) How many businesses breed one or                 own guidance.                                          between law enforcement offices across
                                                  more of the species?                                                                                           the country. LEMIS also serves as the
                                                                                                          Species Information for Salamanders                    conduit for all declared (lawful) imports
                                                     (4) What species listed as threatened
                                                  or endangered by one or more States                     Salamander Nomenclature and                            and exports of wildlife and wildlife
                                                  would be affected by the introduction of                Taxonomy                                               products and the database of all wildlife
                                                  Bsal?                                                                                                          trade data in the United States, both
                                                                                                             Salamander nomenclature and
                                                     (5) What provisions in the interim                                                                          legal and illegal. T. vittatus does not
                                                                                                          taxonomy remained relatively
                                                  rule should the Service have considered                                                                        appear in ITIS or AmphibiaWeb but is
                                                                                                          unchanged from the 1960s until the
                                                  with regard to: (a) The impact of the                                                                          listed in AMNH (2015b). Because it
                                                                                                          1990s, when advances in DNA
                                                  provision(s) (including any benefits and                                                                       appears in LEMIS data, we are including
                                                                                                          sequencing enabled researchers to
                                                  costs), if any, and (b) what alternatives,                                                                     it in 50 CFR 16.14 as a species under the
                                                                                                          examine species relationships more
                                                  if any, the Service should consider, as                                                                        same genus, even though that species
                                                                                                          closely (Petranka 1998). The Service
                                                  well as the costs and benefits of those                                                                        does not appear in either ITIS or
                                                                                                          does not have a uniform policy for
                                                  alternatives, paying specific attention to                                                                     AmphibiaWeb.
                                                                                                          taxonomically identifying amphibians.                     • LEMIS also includes the species
                                                  the effect of the rule on small entities?               In this interim rule, we use taxonomic
                                                     (6) How could the interim rule be                                                                           Triturus hongkongensis (no common
                                                                                                          nomenclature as described by                           name), even though it is not a valid
                                                  modified to reduce costs or burdens for                 AmphibiaWeb (http://amphibiaweb.org)
                                                  some or all entities, including small                                                                          scientific name in ITIS or
                                                                                                          and the Integrated Taxonomic                           AmphibiaWeb. The name may be
                                                  entities, consistent with the Service’s                 Information System (ITIS) (http://
                                                  requirements? For example, we seek                                                                             confused with Paramesotriton
                                                                                                          www.itis.gov). The system used by                      hongkongensis (no common name) due
                                                  comment on the distinct benefits and                    AmphibiaWeb represents one of the
                                                  costs, both quantitative and qualitative,                                                                      to its similarity.
                                                                                                          most widely accepted salamander                           • As a result, even though sources
                                                  of (a) the prohibitions on importation                  taxonomic systems in the scientific                    such as AmphibiaWeb state that there
                                                  and (b) the prohibitions on interstate                  community because it relies on criteria                are approximately 679 species of
                                                  transport of the species listed by this                 including, but not limited to,                         salamanders (AmphibiaWeb 2015c), for
                                                  rule. What are the costs and benefits of                monophyly (common descent from a                       purposes of this interim rule, we have
                                                  the modifications?                                      single ancestor), stability, expertise of              identified approximately 681 species.
                                                     (7) Is there any evidence suggesting                 scientists, and general acceptance by the                 • Hynobius fuca and H. fucus appear
                                                  that Bsal has been introduced into the                  amphibian community (Amphibiaweb                       to be the same species (Taiwan lesser
                                                  United States or may have already                       2015b). As a Federal resource for                      salamander) (AMNH 2015c); we have
                                                  established?                                            taxonomic information, the Service also                included both of these names in 50 CFR
                                                     (8) Are there other pathways for Bsal                uses ITIS as an agency resource (ITIS                  16.14.
                                                  into the United States that we should                   2015).                                                    • Speleomantes strinatii is a synonym
                                                  address? If so, what are they?                             The two databases have some                         for Hydromantes strinatii (Nanjappa,
                                                     (9) Is there evidence suggesting that                differences. For example, AmphibiaWeb                  pers. comm.; Caudata Culture 2015b), of
                                                  any of the species listed by this rule are              contains some species that are not in                  which the French cave salamander or
                                                  not carriers of Bsal? If so, what species?              ITIS. We addressed all species found in                Strinati’s cave salamander are common
                                                     (10) Is there any evidence suggesting                either ITIS or AmphibiaWeb for a given                 names; we have included all of these
                                                  that additional species are carriers of                 genus to avoid confusion over which                    names in 50 CFR 16.14.
                                                  Bsal and should be listed by this rule?                 species we intended to list by this                       In this interim rule, when we refer to
                                                  If so, what species?                                    interim rule. We have also used                        salamanders, we include a variety of
                                                     (11) Are there methods (such as                      additional resources where necessary to                animals from the order Caudata,
                                                  thermal exposure) that would allow                      clarify taxonomy, specifically:                        including those commonly referred to as
                                                  salamanders imported into the United                       • The Kurdistan newt (Neurergus                     salamanders and newts. Other common
                                                  States to be reliably treated to help                   microspilotus) is in ITIS but is not in                names, such as mudpuppy, also exist for
                                                  ensure Bsal is not introduced into the                  AmphibiaWeb. According to the                          certain animals in Caudata.
                                                  United States, and how could                            American Museum of Natural History
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                                                  compliance be monitored?                                (AMNH 2015a), it is likely the same                    Salamander Biology
                                                     (12) Should the Service add eggs or                  species as N. derjugini; consequently,                    Salamanders belong to the class
                                                  other reproductive material of listed                   we have included both scientific names                 Amphibia, a group of cold-blooded
                                                  salamanders to the list of injurious                    in 50 CFR 16.14.                                       animals with a spinal column. The word
                                                  wildlife because they may also carry                       • Martel et al. (2014) identified the               ‘‘amphibian’’ is derived from the fact
                                                  Bsal?                                                   great crested newt (Triturus cristatus) as             that most of the species spend part of
                                                     (13) For the species we are listing, are             being lethally vulnerable to Bsal.                     their lives in water and part on land.
                                                  the scientific and common names the                     Another species in the genus, T. vittatus              The class Amphibia also includes frogs


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                                                  1540             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  and toads, which have legs but no tails                 (Amphibiaweb 2015a). Salamanders are                   Blooi et al. 2015a). Central and North
                                                  as adults, and caecilians, which have                   cryptic (difficult to find) partly because             American salamanders as a group are
                                                  tails but no legs. Morphologically,                     they occupy moist, cool places, such as                active at average temperatures of 11 °C
                                                  salamanders are characterized by their                  underneath logs and between rock                       (52 °F) to 20 °C (68 °F) (Duellman and
                                                  relatively large, vertically flattened tails,           crevices on land or under rocks and logs               Trueb 1986), fully encompassing the
                                                  two front and two hind legs that are                    in the water.                                          optimum temperature for Bsal growth as
                                                  approximately the same size (Petranka                      Salamander courtship between males                  described below under Climate
                                                  1998), and skin with glands that can be                 and females is regulated by chemicals                  Tolerance. Most salamanders require
                                                  either rough or smooth (Stebbins and                    that are released from specialized glands              some amount of constant moisture,
                                                  Cohen 1997). Salamanders range in                       in the skin. Most salamanders reproduce                either for respiration, as in the lungless
                                                  length from around 4 centimeters (1.5                   by laying eggs in water with two                       family Plethodontidae, or for
                                                  inches) to over 1.5 meters (5 feet)                     exceptions: members of family                          temperature regulation (Duellman and
                                                  (Stebbins and Cohen 1997).                              Plethodontidae lay their eggs on land,                 Trueb 1986).
                                                     Salamanders can live for long periods,               and the European species known as the                     Twenty species, subspecies, or
                                                  but documented lifespans vary. Larger                   alpine salamander (Salamandra atra)                    populations of U.S. salamanders from
                                                  salamanders tend to live longer than                    gives birth to live young (Stebbins and                six genera are currently listed as
                                                  smaller ones, and with proper care,                     Cohen 1997). Eggs are surrounded by a                  endangered or threatened under the
                                                  salamanders in captivity frequently live                protective jelly or membrane that keeps                Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
                                                  longer than those in the wild (Duellman                 them from drying out. Almost all                       amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) (ESA).
                                                  and Trueb 1986). Records for captive                    species of salamanders breed during                    An additional three species (three
                                                  animals range from 5 years for most                     specific seasons, and the length of time               genera) are candidates for listing (U.S.
                                                  plethodontids to 55 years for the                       between mating and egg-laying varies                   Fish and Wildlife Service 2015). The
                                                  Japanese giant salamander (Andrias                      considerably between species (Petranka                 specific vulnerability and carrier status
                                                  japonicus) (Duellman and Trueb 1986).                   1998). Species that lay aquatic eggs                   of these species to Bsal is described
                                                  The Olm or blind cave salamander                        place them in either streams or ponds,                 below in Vulnerability and Carrier
                                                  (Proteus anguinus), which lives in caves                and species that lay their eggs on land                Status of Threatened and Endangered
                                                  in southern Europe, has been                            choose hidden places, such as                          Species.
                                                  documented living for at least 48 years                 underground burrows, decaying logs,                       Of the 190 salamander species native
                                                  in the wild, with an estimated lifespan                 and moist rock crevices (Petranka 1998).               to the United States, we find that at least
                                                  of more than 100 years (Live Science                       One example of a species that spends                67 species in 5 genera and in 3 families
                                                  2015).                                                  most of its life on land, but that moves               are capable of being carriers of Bsal:
                                                     Salamanders are carnivorous and eat                  to aquatic areas to breed, is the                      Salamandridae, Sirenidae, and
                                                  a wide variety of prey, depending on                    California tiger salamander (Ambystoma                 Plethodontidae. In North America,
                                                  habitat and the stage of their life cycle.              californiense). During winter rains, this              species in the family Salamandridae
                                                  Terrestrial salamanders eat earthworms,                 species migrates across land to aquatic                occur on the west coast of the United
                                                  insect eggs, and other small                            pools, such as cattle tanks and                        States and Canada from southern
                                                  invertebrates, while aquatic                            ephemeral pools, for breeding purposes.                California to southeastern Alaska, and
                                                  salamanders eat all of these in addition                At the breeding pools, individuals come                much of the eastern half of the United
                                                  to small fish, aquatic insects, and other               in contact with each other, even though                States and extreme southeastern Canada
                                                  amphibians. Some salamander larvae                      they may not come in contact with each                 (Amphibiaweb 2015a; Caudata Culture
                                                  can also be omnivorous and eat both                     other during most of the rest of their                 2015a). Members of the family
                                                  plants and animals.                                     lives on land (Barry and Shaffer 1994).                Sirendidae occur throughout the
                                                     Many salamanders have unique                                                                                southeastern Atlantic and Gulf of
                                                  structural features, including costal                   Habitat Conditions and Native Range of
                                                                                                                                                                 Mexico coastal plains and the
                                                  grooves (grooves on the sides of the                    U.S. Salamanders
                                                                                                                                                                 Mississippi River Valley (Leja 2005)
                                                  body that increase skin surface area for                  With more native salamander species                  (lesser siren (Siren intermedia)) and in
                                                  water absorption and transport) and                     than any other country in the world, the               the Atlantic coastal plains from south
                                                  nasolabial grooves (vertical slits                      United States is a salamander diversity                Florida to Virginia (greater siren (Siren
                                                  between the nostril and upper lip used                  hotspot (Partners in Amphibian and                     lacertina)) (Hendricks 2005). The
                                                  for sensing chemical stimuli in the                     Reptile Conservation 2015; Stein and                   distribution of salamanders of the
                                                  environment), that can be used to                       Kutner 2015). Salamanders are                          family Plethodontidae in the western
                                                  differentiate between salamander                        widespread in the United States.                       hemisphere is from southern Canada to
                                                  species (Petranka 1998). Important                      (Caudata Culture 2015a; U.S. National                  Bolivia and Brazil, except for members
                                                  features for identifying salamanders                    Park Service 2015). Areas of particularly              of the genus Hydromantes, which occur
                                                  include head shape and size, fin shape                  high salamander diversity include the                  in California (Amphibiaweb 2015a,
                                                  and color, gill morphology, color                       southeastern United States, with large                 Caudata Culture 2015a).
                                                  patterns, number of toes, size, body                    numbers of plethodontid salamanders in
                                                  shape, tooth patterns, and number of                    the southern Appalachian Mountains                     Role of Salamanders in the Ecosystem
                                                  costal grooves. Some species appear                     (Richgels et al. in review).                             Salamanders play important roles in
                                                  similar. For example, similarity of                       Salamanders in the United States                     ecosystem function and as indicators of
                                                  appearance within the family                            occupy a wide range of habitats,                       ecosystem health and stability (Davic
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  Salamandridae can make it difficult to                  including streams, trees, land (including              and Welsh 2004). For example,
                                                  differentiate between species, requiring                forests, grasslands, and rocky slopes),                salamanders of family Plethodontidae
                                                  close inspection of small physical                      underground, and caves (Amphibiaweb                    have life-history characteristics that
                                                  characteristics.                                        2015a). These locations are most                       make them exceptional indicators of
                                                     Salamanders occupy a wide range of                   conducive to the relatively cool, moist                forest health (Welsh and Droege 2001).
                                                  habitats, including streams, trees, land                conditions under which both                              In forests, salamanders are also among
                                                  (including forests, grasslands, and rocky               salamanders and Bsal thrive (Duellman                  the most abundant vertebrates. Despite
                                                  slopes), underground, and caves                         and Trueb 1986; Piotrowski et al. 2004;                the relatively small size of most


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1541

                                                  salamanders compared to most other                      pathogenic fungus, Bd, which was the                   How the Fungus Affects Salamanders
                                                  native vertebrates, this sheer abundance                only chytridiomycete taxon known to                       The ‘‘salamandrivorans’’ in
                                                  contributes to a significant amount of                  parasitize vertebrate hosts (Longcore                  Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans
                                                  biomass in the ecosystem, and,                          1999; Johnson and Speare 2003). Bd has                 translates to ‘‘salamandereating’’ and
                                                  therefore, salamanders make significant                 been implicated in the decline and                     accurately describes the effects of the
                                                  contributions to nutrient cycling and                   extinction of amphibian species at the                 fungus on salamanders. Bsal infects the
                                                  transport (Burton and Likens 1975). For                 global scale (Berger et al. 1998; Daszak               skin of amphibians but not deeper
                                                  example, Ambystomatid salamanders                       et al. 2003; Lips et al. 2006; Walker et               tissues or internal organs (Berger 2004;
                                                  can make significant contributions to                   al. 2008; Vredenburg et al. 2010; Cheng                Martel et al. 2013). The cells of the
                                                  energy and nutrient transport in forest                 et al. 2011). Bd has been found on every               fungus (thalli) embed themselves in the
                                                  ecosystems (Regester et al. 2006) and in                continent except Antarctica, and it is                 skin cells of the salamander, thereby
                                                  pond ecosystems (Holomuzki et al.                       known to have affected more than 500                   causing erosive lesions.
                                                  1994). By consuming arthropods                          species of amphibians, including all                      Lesions consist of sores on the skin
                                                  (insects and related invertebrates) that                orders of amphibians (frogs,                           that erode and ulcerate, with secondary
                                                  would otherwise release carbon dioxide                  salamanders, and caecilians) worldwide                 bacterial infection occurring after the
                                                  into the atmosphere by decomposing                      (Chytridcrisis 2015a; Fisher et al. 2009;              sores appear (Martel et al. 2013),
                                                  leaf litter in forests, salamanders reduce                                                                     although many of the salamanders
                                                                                                          Olson et al. 2013).
                                                  carbon emissions from leaf litter                                                                              reported at the beginning of the
                                                  decomposition, which has implications                      Bsal came to the attention of the
                                                                                                                                                                 European Bsal outbreak seemed to lack
                                                  for the global carbon cycle (Wyman                      scientific community only recently.
                                                                                                                                                                 obvious external lesions (Spitzen-van
                                                  1998; Best and Welsh 2014).                             Spitzen-van der Sluijs et al. (2013)
                                                                                                                                                                 der Sluijs et al. 2013). Experimental
                                                  Salamanders that live underground also                  observed a 96 percent decline in fire
                                                                                                                                                                 infections of fire salamanders in the
                                                  contribute to soil dynamics by creating,                salamanders (Salamandra salamandra)                    laboratory caused death 12 to 18 days
                                                  modifying, and otherwise regulating the                 in the Netherlands but was ‘‘unable to                 after exposure, with the same clinical
                                                  systems of underground burrows in                       attribute this to any known cause of                   signs and pathological lesions found in
                                                  which they live (Davic and Welsh 2004).                 amphibian decline, such as                             the European outbreak (Martel et al.
                                                     In vernal pond communities,                          chytridiomycosis [at the time, thought                 2013). Martel et al. (2013) found that
                                                  Ambystoma species are the top                           only to be caused by Bd], ranavirus or                 infected fire salamanders developed
                                                  predators and, therefore, control the                   habitat degradation.’’ Martel et al.                   shallow skin lesions and deep
                                                  abundance of aquatic invertebrates and                  (2013) later identified the cause of the               ulcerations all over the body, and
                                                  other amphibians (Petranka 1998). The                   salamander decline in the Netherlands                  became anorexic, apathetic, and
                                                  high numbers of many amphibians,                        as a newly described species of fungus                 suffered from neurological signs
                                                  including salamanders, in some                          now known as Bsal. Their work                          including a loss of voluntary movement
                                                  ecosystems also provide a substantial                   confirmed that Bsal is related to Bd and               and muscle coordination. Death
                                                  source of prey for other vertebrates in                 is also capable of causing                             occurred within 7 days of clinical signs
                                                  the ecosystem (Harper et al. 2008; Davic                chytridiomycosis. Analysis of a broad                  first appearing in species with lethal
                                                  and Welsh 2004); therefore, other native                range of representative chytrid fungi                  vulnerability.
                                                  species that prey on salamanders can                    show that Bsal represents a previously                    Bsal does not appear to affect
                                                  also be affected by disease-related                     undescribed species that shares early                  reproductive tissue, such as eggs or
                                                  declines.                                               evolutionary origins with the                          gametes. Using Bd for comparison, Bd
                                                  Species Information for Bsal                            pathogenic fungus Bd (Martel et al.                    requires keratin, a structural component
                                                                                                          2013). Until Bsal was discovered, Bd                   of organisms found in amphibian skin,
                                                  General Description of Chytrid Fungus                                                                          which is not found in salamander eggs
                                                                                                          was the only species from that phylum
                                                    In drawing some of our conclusions                    known to infect vertebrates.                           or gametes (Berger 1998).
                                                  about the effects of Bsal on U.S. wildlife
                                                                                                             While Bd has been found in North                    Climate Tolerance
                                                  and wildlife resources, the Service has
                                                                                                          America, Bsal has not yet been found in                   Temperature has a significant impact
                                                  used Bd as a surrogate. Considerably
                                                                                                          North America, and the two fungi do                    on the growth and disease development
                                                  more is known about Bd than Bsal due
                                                                                                          not have the same effects on the same                  of Bsal in salamanders (Martel et al.
                                                  to its discovery and description more
                                                  than 15 years ago (Berger et al. 1998,                  animals. As the authors noted,                         2014). Bsal appears to prefer a
                                                  Longcore et al. 1999), while Bsal was                   ‘‘Chytridiomycosis has resulted in the                 temperature range for growth and
                                                  discovered 2 years ago (Martel et al.                   serious decline and extinction of [more                infection of 10–15 °C (50–59 °F) (Blooi
                                                  2013). The severe effects that Bd, a                    than] 200 species of amphibians                        et al. 2015a; Stephen et al. 2015, Martel
                                                  species closely related to Bsal, has had                worldwide and poses the greatest threat                et al. 2013). Bsal has shown some
                                                  on amphibian populations, has raised                    to biodiversity of any known disease                   growth in temperatures as low as 5 °C
                                                  additional alarm about the expected                     * * *. We [have discovered] a second                   (41 °F) and dies at 25 °C (77 °F) and
                                                  consequences of a Bsal introduction and                 * * * chytrid pathogen, [Bsal], that                   above (Martel et al. 2013). In a
                                                  the need to take immediate action under                 causes lethal skin infections in                       laboratory study, salamanders were
                                                  an interim rule. The two risk                           salamanders * * *. Our finding                         most easily infected by Bsal at
                                                  assessments of Bsal that have been                      provides another explanation for the                   temperatures of 15 °C (59 °F) and 20 °C
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  conducted both used Bd in determining                   phenomenon of amphibian biodiversity                   (68 °F), while Bsal growth was inhibited
                                                  the risk of Bsal based on transmission,                 loss that is emblematic of the current                 at 25 °C (77 °F) (Blooi et al. 2015a). The
                                                  spread, and population-level effects                    global biodiversity crisis.’’ The natural              same temperature response was also
                                                  (Richgels et al. in review; Stephen et al.              host ranges of Bsal remain unknown,                    observed for Bsal raised in culture
                                                  2015).                                                  but so far it has been found only in                   (Blooi et al. 2015a).
                                                    Until Bsal was discovered, the fungal                 salamanders and appears capable of                        This experimental data suggests that
                                                  disease chytridiomycosis was thought to                 causing lethal chytridiomycosis only in                salamanders living at lower
                                                  be caused by a single species of                        salamanders (Martel et al. 2014).                      temperatures are more at risk to


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                                                  1542             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  infection by Bsal. Animals that survive                 Population- and Ecosystem-Level                        ecosystems, where they may compose a
                                                  at temperatures above the optimal range                 Effects of Bsal                                        total biomass greater than or equal to
                                                  for fungal growth are likely to be at                                                                          birds or small mammals (Davic and
                                                                                                          Population-Level Effects
                                                  reduced risk to infection. However, the                                                                        Welsh 2004). This means that, despite
                                                  average temperature ranges of North and                    Several pathogens, including Bsal, Bd,              their small size, the total weight of all
                                                  Central American salamander species is                  ranaviruses, and Saprolegnia sp. (water                salamanders in a given area may be
                                                  from 11 °C (52 °F) to 20 °C (68 °F)                     molds), have caused significant                        more than the combined total weight of
                                                  (Duellman and Trueb 1986; the citation                  population-level declines in a range of                all birds or all small mammals. Because
                                                  does not separate North and Central                     amphibian species, and disease is                      of their abundance under normal
                                                  American data), so salamanders                          thought to be a major driver of global                 circumstances, salamanders are
                                                  regularly reaching 25 °C (77 °F) in the                 amphibian decline (Bosch et al. 2001;                  important prey species themselves and
                                                  natural environment is uncommon.                        Martel et al. 2013; Daszak et al. 2003).               are energy sources for higher predators
                                                  Bales et al. (2015) noted that the native               Disease poses a greater risk to small,                 (Davic and Welsh 2004), including fish,
                                                  salamander species, and by extension                    isolated populations as well as those                  reptiles, birds, and mammals.
                                                  ecosystems, most at risk from a Bsal                    with decreased genetic diversity (Smith                   Salamanders may be the dominant
                                                  introduction would likely be those that                 et al. 2008). Within the United States,                predator in headwater streams and
                                                  occupy similar thermal ranges as the                    diseases have been cited as contributing               ephemeral waterbodies where fish are
                                                  European fire salamander (Bales et al.                  factors in the listing or recovery of                  absent (Davic and Welsh 2004). Within
                                                  2015).                                                  several native amphibian species under                 some food webs, salamanders are
                                                                                                          the ESA. Examples include Bd in the                    considered keystone predators due to
                                                  Ecology and Habitat Preferences                         Ozark hellbender (Cryptobranchus                       their control of invertebrate prey
                                                                                                          alleganiensis bishopi) (76 FR 61956,                   populations and their resulting
                                                     The chytrid fungus Bd can live
                                                                                                          October 6, 2011), an undiagnosed                       regulation of detritus decomposition
                                                  outside of a host and requires water to
                                                                                                          disease in Sonora tiger salamanders                    and nutrient cycling (Davic and Welsh
                                                  disperse because it reproduces asexually
                                                                                                          (Ambystoma tigrinum stebbinsi) (62 FR                  2004). By definition, keystone species
                                                  by forming motile zoospores;
                                                                                                          665, January 6, 1997), and Bd in the                   are those that occupy niches that affect
                                                  preliminary studies of Bsal indicate that
                                                                                                          mountain yellow-legged frog (Rana                      ecosystems and have little functional
                                                  similar modes of survival and
                                                                                                          muscosa) (82 FR 24256, April 29, 2014;                 overlap with other species (Davic and
                                                  transmission are highly likely (Longcore
                                                                                                          Vredenburg et al. 2010).                               Welsh 2004). Therefore, loss of these
                                                  1999; Martel et al. 2013). As the threat                   As noted above in General                           keystone species would result in
                                                  assessment by Stephen et al. 2015)                      Description of Fungus, Bsal is the most                significant ecosystem-level change.
                                                  noted, ‘‘Bd is known to remain viable                   recently discovered pathogen associated                   In addition to their roles in food webs
                                                  for several days to weeks in water                      with population-level amphibian                        and nutrient cycling, salamanders
                                                  (Johnson and Speare 2013) and moist                     declines, including a 96 percent                       participate in a number of interspecific
                                                  organic matter (Johnson and Speare                      reduction in Dutch populations of the                  (between species) ecological
                                                  2003), even in the absence of nutrients.                European fire salamander between                       relationships. Salamander species
                                                  It is likely that Bsal can also survive in              2010–2013 (Spitzen-van der Sluijs et al.               interact with one another through
                                                  moist environments, independent of an                   2013; Martel et al. 2013). Due to the                  competition and predation to control
                                                  amphibian host.’’                                       overall sensitivity of amphibian                       the composition of their assemblages
                                                  Environmental Conditions Needed To                      populations to disease; a history of                   (taxonomically related species that
                                                  Survive                                                 adverse, population-level effects in                   occur within the same geographic
                                                                                                          native amphibians; a direct association                community) (Davic and Welsh 2004;
                                                     The transmission and ecology of Bsal                 between Bsal and the decline of at least               Fauth et al. 1996). Frequently, a single
                                                  in the wild is likely to be similar to Bd               one European salamander population;                    species is dominant within a given
                                                  based on the close taxonomic                            and the adverse effects of some native                 assemblage, particularly in terrestrial
                                                  relationship between the species, their                 salamanders to Bsal under experimental                 habitats, but which species dominates
                                                  structural similarities, and their                      conditions, we conclude that the                       varies by location and ecosystem (Davic
                                                  comparable pathophysiology (Martel et                   introduction of Bsal into the United                   and Welsh 2004). We find that
                                                  al. 2013, Stephen et al. (2015). Johnson                States would cause significant, adverse,               ecosystems where the dominant
                                                  and Speare (2003) reported that Bd can                  population-level effects in a number of                salamander species is vulnerable to
                                                  survive in tap water and deionized                      native species.                                        lethal or susceptible infections with
                                                  water for up to 3 and 4 weeks,                                                                                 Bsal would be at risk from an
                                                  respectively, and up to 7 weeks in lake                 Ecosystem-Level Effects                                introduction of this pathogen.
                                                  water. Bsal is also likely to survive in                  The preferred temperature range of                      Salamanders also interact with
                                                  moist environments independent of an                    Bsal can help predict those ecosystems                 invertebrate species in other
                                                  amphibian host. While we do not have                    that are at greatest risk should Bsal be               ecologically important ways. Semi-
                                                  information on the response of Bsal to                  introduced into the United States                      aquatic salamander species can move
                                                  desiccation, Bd is highly impacted by                   (Stephen et al. 2015). The native                      mollusks and shrimp eggs between
                                                  drying and can survive desiccation for                  salamander species, and by extension                   waterbodies during their migrations,
                                                  no more than 1 hour in the laboratory                   ecosystems, most at risk from a Bsal                   allowing these invertebrates to inhabit
                                                  (Garmyn et al. 2012); Bsal would likely                 introduction would likely be those that                new areas (Davic and Welsh 2004).
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  respond in a similar way. Bsal appears                  occupy similar thermal ranges as the                   Additionally, one species of
                                                  to be adapted to temperatures and                       European fire salamander (Bales et al.                 salamander, the mudpuppy (Necturus
                                                  humidity conditions most conducive to                   2015).                                                 maculosus), is a required host for
                                                  salamander survival, thus supporting                      Salamanders are important parts of                   developing stages of the salamander
                                                  the hypothesis that the pathogen co-                    the ecosystems in which they occur.                    mussel (Simpsonaias ambigua), a
                                                  evolved with salamanders in the part of                 Salamanders are often the most                         native, freshwater mollusk for which a
                                                  the world from which it is endemic,                     abundant vertebrates in terrestrial forest             positive 90-day finding has been made
                                                  most likely in Asia (Martel et al. 2014).               and riparian (the banks of watercourses)               under the Endangered Species Act of


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1543

                                                  1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et                     bait were highly infected with both                    species that travel long distances for
                                                  seq.) (76 FR 59836; September 27, 2011)                 ranavirus and Bd, thereby increasing the               breeding and dispersal migrations, such
                                                  (Davic and Welsh 2004; Gangloff and                     likelihood of disease transmission into                as those that exhibit a metapopulation
                                                  Folkerts 2006; United States Fish and                   new areas of the United States through                 structure (Bancroft et al. 2011). A
                                                  Wildlife Service 2015b, United States                   the act of fishing.                                    metapopulation is a group of discrete
                                                  Fish and Wildlife Service 2015c). We                    Invasiveness and Transmission of Bsal                  breeding populations of the same
                                                  conclude that invertebrate species that                                                                        species (Gill 1978). For example, within
                                                  depend on salamanders for aspects of                       As noted above under General                        salamander metapopulations, California
                                                  their life cycle or ecology are likely to               Description of Fungus, Europe has been                 tiger salamanders (Ambystoma
                                                  be adversely affected if their host                     experiencing a severe decline in wild                  californiense) have been documented
                                                  species declines in response to a Bsal                  fire salamander populations in the                     traveling up to 1.2 miles (1.9 kilometers)
                                                  introduction.                                           Netherlands (Spitzen-van der Sluijs et                 from upland habitat to aquatic breeding
                                                                                                          al. 2013). This decline is so significant              sites (USFWS 2000), and newts travel
                                                  Invasiveness of Salamanders and Bsal                    that fire salamander populations are                   many kilometers to breeding sites (Gill
                                                  Invasiveness of Salamanders                             facing local extinction in the                         1978).
                                                                                                          Netherlands, though other populations                     Salamander species that have
                                                     Some salamanders have the ability to                 throughout Europe appear to be stable
                                                  invade new environments in which they                                                                          abundant populations with widespread
                                                                                                          (AmphibiaWeb 2015c). A sharp decline                   distributions can also contribute to the
                                                  are not native. Globally, 90 percent of                 in numbers has been observed since
                                                  salamander introductions have occurred                                                                         spread of Bsal because of the increased
                                                                                                          2010, despite the species being listed as              likelihood that they will come in close
                                                  through intentional releases (Tingley et                endangered on the Netherlands Red
                                                  al. 2010). As of 2010, salamanders                                                                             contact with other salamanders that
                                                                                                          List, and at population levels that were               could then become infected.
                                                  comprised 22 percent of all recorded                    thought to be stable. This enigmatic
                                                  amphibian introductions, with the                                                                              Salamanders that can carry Bsal from
                                                                                                          decline was not attributed to any known                one place to another are more likely to
                                                  highest number of salamander                            cause of amphibian decline, such as
                                                  introductions (15) from the family                                                                             do so if they have a broad range where
                                                                                                          chytridiomycosis due to Bd, ranavirus,                 they will come in contact with other
                                                  Salamandridae, followed by                              or habitat degradation. In late 2013, Bsal
                                                  salamanders from the families                                                                                  members of the same species (for
                                                                                                          was isolated from infected fire                        abundant distributions) or other species
                                                  Ambystomatidae (4), Cryptobranchidae                    salamanders in the Netherlands (Martel
                                                  (2), and Proteidae (2) (Tingley et al.                                                                         (for widespread distributions). Species
                                                                                                          et al. 2013).                                          with broad distributions are adapted to
                                                  2010).                                                     Martel et al. (2014) later established
                                                     Nonnative salamander introductions                                                                          a wide range of environmental
                                                                                                          the highly pathogenic nature of this new
                                                  have been documented in the United                                                                             conditions that are more likely to
                                                                                                          chytrid fungus. Molecular testing found
                                                  States. As described below under                                                                               overlap with habitat suitable for Bsal as
                                                                                                          Bsal in specimens collected from the
                                                  Likelihood of Release or Escape, the                                                                           well as habitat suitable for that species,
                                                                                                          wild (though none from North America)
                                                  United States Geological Survey (USGS)                                                                         providing increased opportunities for
                                                                                                          and even in an archival (museum)
                                                  Nonindigenous Aquatic Species                                                                                  Bsal to spread.
                                                                                                          sample that was 150 years old (Martel
                                                  database has U.S. records for 14                                                                                  For example, the rough-skinned newt
                                                                                                          et al. 2014). A wide variety of
                                                  salamander species that have been                                                                              (Taricha granulosa) has a wide range
                                                                                                          salamanders are negatively affected by
                                                  observed outside their native range. Of                                                                        along the West Coast from Alaska to
                                                                                                          the pathogen, but frogs, toads, and
                                                  those, 11 are native to the United States                                                                      California, and the eastern newt
                                                                                                          caecilians do not appear to be (Martel et
                                                  but were discovered outside of their                                                                           (Notophthalmus viridescens) ranges
                                                                                                          al. 2014). The pathogenic nature of the
                                                  native ranges, and 3 (Japanese newt                                                                            widely across the eastern United States,
                                                                                                          fungus and its ability to infect a wide
                                                  (also called the Japanese fire-bellied                                                                         occurring in 34 States (Amphibiaweb
                                                                                                          variety of salamanders, as described
                                                  newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster), Oriental                                                                           2015a). Both species have had lethal
                                                                                                          below in Classification and Status as
                                                  fire belly newt (also called the Oriental                                                                      responses with laboratory infections of
                                                                                                          Carriers, definitively demonstrate an
                                                  fire-bellied newt, Cynops orientalis),                                                                         Bsal (Martel et al. 2014), and both are
                                                                                                          invasive threat to salamanders in the
                                                  and the spotless stout newt (Pachytriton                                                                       capable of carrying Bsal. In addition to
                                                                                                          United States.
                                                  labiatus)) are exotic species from                         In Bd, the ability of the pathogen to               its broad range, N. viridescens also
                                                  outside the United States (USGS 2015).                  be transmitted between individuals is                  migrates long distances; this species
                                                  In Florida, the Oriental fire belly newt                dependent upon the density of                          will frequently travel many kilometers
                                                  and spotless stout newt, which are                      populations (Rachowicz and Briggs                      to migrate to new ponds (Gill 1978),
                                                  native to China (family Salamandridae),                 2007) and the presence of a vector that                further increasing the risk of this species
                                                  have been found in the wild near an                     can carry the disease to uninfected                    spreading Bsal.
                                                  animal importer’s facility, either as the               populations (Greenspan et al. 2012); we                Pathway Analysis
                                                  result of intentional releases or escapes               expect the same for Bsal. Experiments
                                                  from enclosures (Krysko et al. 2011).                   have shown that Bsal can be transmitted                Introduction Pathways
                                                     Other invasions have been attributed                 from one species to another when the                      The main pathway for the global
                                                  to the use and subsequent release of                    species come into contact (Martel et al.               spread of Bsal is the international trade
                                                  salamanders used as fishing bait.                       2014).                                                 in salamanders (Martel et al. 2014). The
                                                  Surveys of anglers have indicated that                     Salamanders that breed in ponds and                 introduction of Bsal into mainland
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  they routinely release salamanders into                 temporary wetlands are often explosive                 Europe is linked with the commercial
                                                  the areas where they fish, which                        breeders, meaning that hundreds to                     trade of Asian salamanders (Cynops
                                                  includes areas that are not part of the                 multiple thousands of individuals will                 spp.) from East Asia, particularly
                                                  salamander’s native U.S. habitats,                      reproduce at the same time (Gill 1978),                Thailand, Vietnam, and Japan (Martel et
                                                  suggesting that animals are routinely                   creating dense numbers of individuals                  al. 2014). As described above in How
                                                  moved long distances (Picco and Collins                 and increasing opportunities for the                   the Fungus Affects Salamanders, eggs
                                                  2008). Furthermore, Picco and Collins                   pathogen to spread. Pathogens are also                 and gametes are not expected to be
                                                  (2008) found that salamanders sold as                   likely to be transmitted by salamander                 pathways. However, salamanders that


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                                                  1544             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  have been identified as carriers, whether                  The most likely pathway of a                          The species with the highest number
                                                  live or dead, are expected to transmit                  salamander that is a host to Bsal into the             of imports into the United States from
                                                  Bsal through their skin, which contains                 United States would include a pet store                2004 to 2014 was the Oriental fire belly
                                                  keratin. We are also concerned that any                 or online retailer. Individuals would                  newt; this species comprised 54 percent
                                                  salamanders that are infected and                       purchase the salamander from a pet                     of the total number of imported
                                                  lethally vulnerable may die in transport                store (or online retailer) and keep it in              salamanders (USFWS OLE 2015).
                                                  and continue to carry Bsal into the                     captivity as a pet. Many amphibians and                Twelve species of salamanders that are
                                                  United States. As such, we also expect                  reptiles first kept as pets are released by            native to the United States were also
                                                  dead salamanders and body parts to be                   their owners into the wild either                      imported into the United States from
                                                  a pathway.                                              intentionally or accidentally (Kraus                   other countries from 2004 through 2014
                                                     Individual amphibians in trade are                   2009, Krysko et al. 2011). For example,                (USFWS OLE 2015).
                                                  often transported in containers with                    owners may no longer be able to care for
                                                                                                          their pets or an animal may escape its                 Risk Assessments and Salamander
                                                  many other individuals of the same                                                                             Effects From Bsal
                                                  species or with many other species that                 enclosure. In addition to the risk from
                                                  can all be from different sources. These                a release of an infected pet salamander                Bsal Risk Assessments
                                                  conditions are highly conducive to                      into the wild, the water that is used to
                                                                                                                                                                    Two Bsal risk assessments are
                                                  pathogen transmission and dispersal.                    house an infected pet in captivity would
                                                                                                                                                                 available to help determine the risk
                                                  Pathogens can transfer from host to host                feasibly contain Bsal zoospores. As a
                                                                                                                                                                 associated with Bsal introduction into
                                                  in crowded conditions, and crowded                      result, the discharge of untreated water
                                                                                                                                                                 North America. The USGS conducted a
                                                  conditions create stress on animals that                used to house infected, captive animals
                                                                                                                                                                 risk assessment for the United States
                                                  can reduce amphibian hosts’ natural                     could be a pathway for releasing
                                                                                                                                                                 that helped us determine the level of
                                                  ability to ward off infections (Rowley et               infective zoospores into the
                                                                                                                                                                 risk associated with Bsal introduction
                                                  al. 2007, Rachowicz et al. 2005, Rollins-               environment and exposing native
                                                                                                          salamanders to Bsal (Stephen et al.                    (Richgels et al. in review). Stephen et al.
                                                  Smith et al. 2011).                                                                                            (2015) also conducted a Bsal risk
                                                     Bsal can also be introduced into the                 2015).
                                                                                                                                                                 assessment for Canada that showed
                                                  environment through the improper                        International Trade in Salamanders                     Canada is also at risk.
                                                  disposal of contaminated water or other                    Trade in wildlife occurs on a global                   The USGS risk assessment concludes
                                                  materials used to transport salamanders.                scale, and amphibians are one of the                   that the potential for Bsal introduction
                                                  As described above under                                most commonly traded animals (Smith                    into the United States is high, the
                                                  Environmental Conditions Needed to                      et al. 2009). More than 52,149,000                     United States has suitable conditions for
                                                  Survive, the fungus can likely persist in               documented amphibians were imported                    Bsal survival, and the consequences of
                                                  such materials independent of whether                   into the United States from 2004 to                    introduction into the United States are
                                                  a salamander is present. Water and                      2014, based on the Service’s LEMIS data                expected to be severe and occur across
                                                  other materials have served as fomites to               (USFWS OLE 2015). Salamanders                          a wide range of the United States
                                                  introduce other similar pathogens into                  comprised 2,504,590 (4.8 percent) of the               (Richgels et al. in review). To evaluate
                                                  the environment. For example, Bd has                    total imports of amphibians (USFWS                     the potential for Bsal introduction, the
                                                  been found in water used to transport                   OLE 2015). The 2004 to 2014 LEMIS                      USGS assessment combined information
                                                  amphibians that were traded in Hong                     dataset should be considered as a                      on the number of individual
                                                  Kong (Kolby et al. 2014). As the authors                conservative estimate because many                     salamanders imported at each port of
                                                  noted, ‘‘[T]he abundance of aquatic                     import records identified the animal                   entry and the number of pet supply
                                                  amphibian species traded by Hong Kong                   being imported only as a member of the                 establishments by county. Based on this
                                                  . . ., prolonged environmental                          Class Amphibia (rather than identifying                evaluation, Bsal introduction potential
                                                  persistence of infectious . . . Bd                      it to species or genus level). In addition,            was highest in central and southern
                                                  particles, and employment of trade                      incorrect salamander identifications to                Florida, southern California, and near
                                                  activities that neither disinfect water                 genus and species level appear to have                 New York City, New York (Richgels et
                                                  nor safely dispose of deceased animals                  commonly occurred in reporting to                      al. in review).
                                                  creates an ideal pathway for disease                    LEMIS (USFWS OLE 2015). LEMIS data                        To determine the consequences of
                                                  transmission to native Hong Kong                        shows that 65 percent of imported                      Bsal introduction into the United States,
                                                  amphibians.’’                                           salamanders came from captive sources                  the USGS risk assessment evaluated
                                                     Drawing on this evidence, the primary                and 35 percent were from wild sources                  environmental suitability, species
                                                  pathway for the entry of salamanders                    (USFWS OLE 2015). The LEMIS data                       richness, and predicted species
                                                  that are hosts of Bsal into the United                  recorded only 83 percent of declared                   susceptibility. Overall, the total risk of
                                                  States is through the international                     imports at the species level, whereas 17               Bsal to native salamanders is high.
                                                  commercial wildlife trade. Overall, 99.9                percent were recorded to the genus level               Based on both likely introduction and
                                                  percent of salamander importation into                  (USFWS OLE 2015).                                      resultant consequences, the risk of Bsal
                                                  the United States is for commercial                        The four salamander genera most                     is the highest for the Pacific coast,
                                                  purposes (USFWS OLE 2015). From                         commonly imported into the United                      southern Appalachian Mountains, and
                                                  2010 to 2014, salamanders were                          States from 2004 to 2014 were Cynops,                  mid-Atlantic regions (Richgels et al. in
                                                  imported through 14 ports of entry into                 Paramesotriton, Triturus, and                          review). The areas most likely to have
                                                  the United States; the 3 ports of entry                 Pachytriton (USFWS OLE 2015).                          consequences from Bsal introduction
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  with the largest numbers of imported                    Cynops, Triturus, and Paramesotriton                   are the Pacific Coast and Appalachian
                                                  salamanders were Los Angeles                            are three genera that can serve as                     Mountains (Richgels et al. in review).
                                                  (California), Tampa (Florida), and New                  carriers for Bsal (Martel et al. 2014). Of             Based on environmental suitability,
                                                  York (New York) (Richgels et al. in                     the 20 genera listed by this interim rule,             areas of the United States most suited to
                                                  review). After import, many of the                      15 have been traded over the 11 years.                 Bsal growth (Blooi et al. 2015a),
                                                  salamanders are transported to animal                   Salamanders that can carry Bsal have                   including the Southwest, Southeast, and
                                                  wholesalers, who then transport the                     comprised 95 percent of imported                       Pacific regions, are also the areas of
                                                  salamanders to pet retailers.                           salamanders.                                           highest salamander diversity (Richgels


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1545

                                                  et al. in review). Yap et al. (2015) also               carrier can be drawn from a comparison                 comm.) found 25 species from 19 genera
                                                  identified the southeastern and western                 to Bd, which as described above under                  are carriers of Bsal. Additional
                                                  United States as zones of high risk.                    General Description of Chytrid Fungus                  communications (Chytridcrisis 2015b;
                                                     Some species may be protected from                   is a close relative of Bsal. As noted                  Cunningham et al. 2015; Nanjappa,
                                                  Bsal by temperatures in their regions                   earlier, the two risk assessments of Bsal              pers. comm.) identified another two
                                                  that are outside of the Bsal optimal                    that have been conducted both used Bd                  species from two separate genera as
                                                  growth range (Richgels et al. in review),               in determining the risk of Bsal based on               carriers: The pygmy marbled newt
                                                  but the average temperature preferences                 transmission, spread, and population-                  (Triturus pygmaeus) and the golden
                                                  of salamanders from Central and North                   level effects (Richgels et al. in review;              striped salamander (Chioglossa
                                                  America (Duellman and Trueb 1986),                      Stephen et al. 2015). Considerably more                lusitanica). Because Martel et al. (2014)
                                                  which range from ¥2.0 °C (28.4 °F) to                   is known about Bd than Bsal due to its                 had previously identified members of
                                                  30.0 °C (86.0 °F), suggest that most                    discovery and description more than 15                 the Triturus genus as carriers, it is
                                                  salamander species, including those                     years ago (Berger et al. 1998; Longcore                already accounted for within the 19
                                                  within the United States, are active near               et al. 1999), while Bsal was discovered                genera. The addition of this species
                                                  the thermal growth optimum for Bsal                     only 2 years ago (Martel et al. 2013). Bd              brings the total number of known carrier
                                                  (Blooi et al. 2015a). Most U.S.                         has caused amphibian declines and                      species to 26. In addition to Triturus,
                                                  salamander species are also dependent                   extinctions worldwide (Skerratt et al.                 Chioglossa was identified as another
                                                  upon forests, a habitat type dominated                  2007). Bd affects species in patterns                  genus capable of serving as a carrier by
                                                  by relatively cool, moist conditions, for               (Skerratt et al. 2007), and more closely               Chytridcrisis (2015b), Cunningham et
                                                  the majority of their life cycle (Davic                 related species have similar outcomes                  al. (2015), and Nanjappa (pers. comm.).
                                                  and Welsh 2004).                                        for Bd at the family level (Smith et al.               As a result, the total number of species
                                                  Vulnerability and Carrier Status                        2009; Bancroft et al. 2011). Amphibians                known to serve as carriers of Bsal is 27
                                                                                                          experiencing the most severe declines                  from 20 genera. These 20 genera include
                                                     The urgent need to prevent Bsal                      are grouped by relatedness, which is                   the following: Chioglossa, Cynops,
                                                  introduction risks was raised by                        likely due to the shared evolutionary                  Euproctus, Hydromantes, Hynobius,
                                                  evidence presented by Martel et al.                     histories of closely related species with              Ichthyosaura, Lissotriton, Neurergus,
                                                  (2014), who tested Bsal on 35 species                   a similar response to chytridiomycosis                 Notophthalmus, Onychodactylus,
                                                  from all three orders of amphibians:                    (Corey and Waite 2008). The U.S.                       Paramesotriton, Plethodon, Pleurodeles,
                                                  frogs, salamanders, and caecilians.                     Department of Agriculture (USDA) uses                  Salamandra, Salamandrella,
                                                  Martel et al. (2014) further screened                   a similar approach. Closely related                    Salamandrina, Siren, Taricha, Triturus,
                                                  5,391 specimens collected from 4                        species are considered more likely to                  and Tylototriton.
                                                  continents for evidence of Bsal                         have similar traits and are used in risk                  In conducting its analysis, the Service
                                                  infection.                                              assessments to determine threats from a                initially focused on identifying species
                                                     Martel et al. (2014) defines a                       target species of interest; a potential pest           for listing as injurious that scientific
                                                  ‘‘resistant’’ salamander as one that                    is regarded as a threat when other                     evidence demonstrates are capable of
                                                  either was not infected or developed a                  species in a genus pose a similar threat               carrying Bsal. As we described above,
                                                  short-term infection without clinical                   (Wapshere 1974; Gilbert et al. 2012).                  however, we find that, due to shared
                                                  signs following exposure to Bsal; a                        We find that, due to shared                         characteristics by species within a
                                                  ‘‘tolerant’’ salamander is one that                     characteristics by species within a                    genus, other species within these genera
                                                  maintains a more prolonged infection                    genus, other species within these genera               are also highly likely to be carriers of
                                                  with no signs of disease; a ‘‘susceptible’’             are also highly likely to be carriers of               Bsal, even if not every species in the
                                                  salamander becomes infected and has                     Bsal if one species has been identified                genus has been tested to verify that it is
                                                  clinical signs of disease with the                      as a carrier, even if not every species in             a carrier of Bsal. This conclusion is
                                                  possibility of subsequent recovery; and                 the genus has been tested to verify that               because more closely related species,
                                                  a salamander that responds in a ‘‘lethal’’              it is a carrier of Bsal. Our analysis found            such as those found within the same
                                                  manner to Bsal dies as a result of                      no conclusive countervailing evidence                  genus, share common traits. Our
                                                  infection. According to Martel et al.                   that species differed within a genus                   analysis found no conclusive evidence
                                                  (2014), resistant salamanders are not a                 with respect to their ability to act as                to the contrary that suggested that all
                                                  risk for transmitting Bsal. However,                    carriers. As such, we expect all species               species within such genera are not
                                                  based on the available scientific data,                 in a genus to respond similarly as                     carriers.
                                                  we concluded that resistant species with                carriers or non-carriers to Bsal.                         We have focused our findings on
                                                  evidence of short-term infection, as well               Therefore, based on existing scientific                salamanders and the genera in which
                                                  as those reported to have tolerant,                     evidence, and as described in more                     they are found that we concluded are
                                                  susceptible, or lethal responses to Bsal,               detail below, we are listing all species               capable of carrying Bsal, and we are not
                                                  are ‘‘carriers’’ capable of transmitting                in the 20 genera, including 201 known                  listing genera that Martel et al. (2014)
                                                  Bsal to other salamanders and                           species, that we now conclude                          identified are not carriers of Bsal: Based
                                                  introducing the fungus into the United                  constitute a threat to introducing and                 on our analysis of their data, such
                                                  States. The Service finds that a species                spreading Bsal in the United States                    salamanders are not capable of
                                                  is considered to be a ‘‘non-carrier’’                   because such species can carry the                     introducing Bsal to the United States or
                                                  when Martel et al. (2014) classified the                fungus and transmit it to other species                otherwise transmitting Bsal to native
                                                  species as ‘‘resistant’’ and no histologic              which would be negatively impacted.                    populations. In addition, we are not
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  or field surveillance data was found to                    While frogs and caecilians showed                   listing genera at this time where there is
                                                  suggest that short-term Bsal infection                  resistance to Bsal, many salamanders                   no data because we do not have a basis
                                                  could occur; ‘‘non-carriers’’ are                       exhibited a strong, adverse response to                for doing so, even though the Service
                                                  considered incapable of transmitting                    Bsal infection; many species from                      recognizes that it is possible that
                                                  Bsal to other salamanders or introducing                outside of the native range of the fungus              untested genera may also be capable of
                                                  the fungus into the United States.                      (Asia) exhibited lethal vulnerability.                 carrying Bsal. Likewise, we are not
                                                     We also find the likelihood of a                     Our analysis of Martel et al. (2014) and               listing hybrids derived from species
                                                  species within the same genus being a                   follow-up communication (Martel, pers.                 consisting of a listed genera and an


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                                                  1546             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  unlisted one because we do not know                     Bsal under experimental conditions.                    spring salamander (Gyrinophilus
                                                  their status as carriers. However,                      However, we find that the misty                        porphyriticus), marbled salamander
                                                  consistent with our view that species                   salamander (H. nebulosus) is a carrier                 (Ambystoma opacum), and spotted
                                                  within a genus are likely to be carriers                based on detection of Bsal by Martel et                salamander (A. maculatum). Of these, 2
                                                  of Bsal if one species within that genus                al. (2014) in a free-ranging specimen                  species were found to be lethally
                                                  has been identified as a carrier, hybrids               from Japan. The histology tests that                   affected, 1 was tolerant, and 4 were
                                                  consisting of two species from within                   were conducted for the slimy                           described as resistant, although
                                                  the same genus are expected also to be                  salamander and the palmate newt, and                   additional evidence indicates that one
                                                  carriers.                                               which we used to find that these species               of the resistant species is capable of
                                                     In conclusion, we have decided to list               are carriers, were not conducted for the               transmitting the fungus, resulting in a
                                                  all 201 species in the 20 genera where                  Hokkaido salamander. Bsal’s ability to                 positive carrier status. As we described
                                                  at least one species has been positively                invade the skin of the Hokkaido                        above in Vulnerability and Carrier
                                                  identified as a carrier of Bsal and there               salamander remains unknown because                     Status, although the Service found
                                                  is no countervailing conclusive                         histologic examination of the skin was                 evidence that species within a genus
                                                  evidence suggesting that some species                   not conducted for the species. Because                 may vary in their specific vulnerability
                                                  within the genus are not carriers. Where                the Hokkaido salamander was resistant                  (that is, lethal, susceptible, tolerant, or
                                                  one species has been identified as a                    in experimental tests but was not tested               resistant, as defined in Martel et al.
                                                  carrier, we find that the other species in              histologically to look for invasion in the             (2014)), we expect all species in a genus
                                                  that genus are also carriers. This finding              skin, we find that the Hokkaido                        to respond similarly as carriers or non-
                                                  includes hybrids consisting of species                  salamander has an inconclusive status                  carriers to Bsal due to the shared
                                                  found within the genus.                                 as a carrier and base our finding of                   characteristics between species.
                                                     In reaching this conclusion, it is                   whether species from the genus                         Therefore, we are listing all species
                                                  worth noting that Martel et al. (2014)                  Hynobius are carriers on results                       within a genus where at least one
                                                  classified the slimy salamander (or                     identified for the misty salamander (a                 species in that genus has been identified
                                                  northern slimy salamander, Plethodon                    carrier from the same genus). Because                  as a carrier of Bsal.
                                                  glutinosus) as resistant to infection.                  we expect all species within a genus to                   Based on the results of Martel et al.
                                                  Martel et al. (2014) demonstrated by                    respond in a similar way as a carrier or               (2014), at least 2 native U.S. species, the
                                                  histology, however, that Bsal could                     not of Bsal, we concluded that all                     eastern newt and rough-skinned newt,
                                                  invade the skin of the slimy salamander,                species from the genus Hynobius are                    were found to be lethally vulnerable to
                                                  even though it was otherwise resistant                  also carriers.                                         Bsal. The French cave salamander
                                                  through challenge testing and did not                      Finally, although Martel et al. (2014)              (Hydromantes strinatii), which is not
                                                  show signs of infection. Our                            did not test species from the genus                    native to the United States, was also
                                                  examination of the supplementary data                   Onychodactylus in the laboratory,                      tested and identified as lethally
                                                  of Martel et al. (2014), including                      Martel et al. (2014) observed Bsal on the              vulnerable to Bsal (Martel et al. 2014).
                                                  histology (microscopy) tests and                        Japanese clawed salamander (O.                         The Notophthalmus genus has two
                                                  subsequent discussions with the                         japonicas) in a free-ranging specimen                  additional native species: The black-
                                                  authors, indicate that there is sufficient              from Japan. Based on that evidence, we                 spotted newt (N. meridionalis) and the
                                                  evidence that Bsal was able to invade                   concluded that this species is a carrier.              striped newt (N. perstriatus). The
                                                  the skin of this species long enough to                 Because we expect all species within a                 Taricha genus has three additional
                                                  move or transmit the infection to other                 genus to respond in a similar way as a                 native species: The red-bellied newt (T.
                                                  salamanders (Martel et al. 2014; Martel,                carrier or not of Bsal, we concluded that              rivularis), Sierra newt (T. sierra), and
                                                  pers. comm.; Lips, pers. comm.).                        the other species in the genus                         California newt (T. torosa). The
                                                  Because we expect all species within a                  Onychodactylus are also carriers.                      Hydromantes genus has three native
                                                  genus to respond in a similar way as a                                                                         U.S. species: The limestone salamander
                                                  carrier or not of Bsal, we conclude that                Vulnerability and Carrier Status of
                                                                                                                                                                 (H. brunus), Mount Lyell salamander (H.
                                                  all species of Plethodon are carriers.                  Native Species
                                                                                                                                                                 platycephalus), and Shasta salamander
                                                     Martel et al. (2014) also classified the               There are 190 species of salamander                  (H. shastae).
                                                  palmate newt (Lissotriton helveticus) as                in 23 genera native to the United States                  At least 1 native U.S. species from the
                                                  resistant to infection even though the                  (AmphibiaWeb 2015b). Of the 201                        Siren genus, the lesser siren, has a
                                                  Italian newt (Lissotriton italicus) was                 salamander species that we conclude                    tolerant vulnerability (Martel et al.
                                                  identified as lethally vulnerable to Bsal.              are carriers of Bsal (20 genera in 4                   (2014). The genus has one additional
                                                  Martel conducted histological tests that                families), 67 species (5 genera in 3                   native species: The greater siren (S.
                                                  showed the palmate newt could carry                     families) are native to the United States.             lacertina).
                                                  Bsal even though it demonstrated                        Of the remaining 123 species native to                    Four native species have been
                                                  resistant vulnerability. Our examination                the United States, we found that 20                    identified as resistant by Martel et al.
                                                  of the data of Martel et al. (2014), as                 species are not carriers and the                       (2014), but we have concluded that one
                                                  well as a personal communication from                   vulnerability and carrier status of the                of these species is still capable of
                                                  K. Lips (2015), indicates that there is                 remaining 103 species from the other 16                carrying Bsal. As we describe above in
                                                  sufficient evidence that Bsal was able to               genera is unknown.                                     Vulnerability and Carrier Status, we
                                                  invade the skin of the palmate newt                       We based our findings of the 67 native               conclude that the slimy salamander is
                                                  long enough to pass the infection to                    species on tests conducted by Martel et                resistant to sustained infection but it
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                                                  other salamanders. Because we expect                    al. (2014), who tested 7 native species                can serve as a short-term carrier of Bsal.
                                                  all species within a genus to respond in                in the laboratory for Bsal vulnerability.              The Plethodon genus has 54 other
                                                  a similar way as a carrier or not of Bsal,              The native species that Martel et al.                  species, all of which are native to the
                                                  we also conclude that all species of                    (2014) tested were the eastern newt                    United States (AmphibiaWeb 2015b),
                                                  Lissotriton are carriers.                               (Notophthalmus viridescens), rough-                    bringing the total number of native
                                                     In addition, Martel et al. (2014)                    skinned newt (Taricha granulosa),                      carrier species to 67.
                                                  classified the Hokkaido salamander                      lesser siren (Siren intermedia), slimy                    Three additional native salamander
                                                  (Hynobius retardatus) as resistant to                   salamander (Plethodon glutinosus),                     species were identified as resistant to


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          1547

                                                  Bsal infection: The spring salamander                   listed as federally endangered or                      native species in 11 genera that are
                                                  (Gyrinophilus porphyriticus), marbled                   threatened are classified within the                   currently under review for ESA listing
                                                  salamander (Ambystoma opacum), and                      Ambystoma genus, which we find is not                  (USFWS 2015).
                                                  spotted salamander (A. maculatum)                       a carrier of the fungus: Reticulated
                                                                                                                                                                 Additional Factors That Contribute to
                                                  (Martel et al. 2014). They are not                      flatwoods salamander (A. bishopi),
                                                                                                                                                                 Consideration of Salamanders as
                                                  expected to be carriers; therefore, we                  California tiger salamander (three DPSs),
                                                                                                                                                                 Injurious
                                                  conclude that the 20 native U.S. species                frosted flatwoods salamander (A.
                                                  in their genera are not capable of                      cingulatum), Santa Cruz long-toed                      Likelihood of Release or Escape
                                                  carrying Bsal. This includes 4 species                  salamander (A. macrodactylum                              In general, there is widespread
                                                  from the genus Gyrinophilus and 16                      croceum), and Sonora tiger salamander                  concern over the increasing spread of
                                                  species from the genus Ambystoma                        (Martel et al. 2014; USFWS 2015).                      pathogens moved through the wildlife
                                                  (AmphibiaWeb 2015b).                                       No information is available regarding
                                                                                                                                                                 trade (for example, Karesh et al. 2005).
                                                     Of the 190 native U.S. salamander                    Bsal vulnerability or carrier status of the
                                                                                                                                                                 Substantial evidence shows that Bd has
                                                  species, carrier status has not been                    remaining 11 ESA-listed or candidate
                                                                                                                                                                 spread extensively throughout the world
                                                  assessed in 103 species from 16 genera.                 species or subspecies native to the
                                                                                                                                                                 through the amphibian trade (Fisher and
                                                  The untested genera are Amphiuma,                       United States: desert slender
                                                                                                                                                                 Garner 2007; Schloegel et al. 2009;
                                                  Aneides, Batrachoseps, Cryptobranchus,                  salamander (Batrachoseps aridus),
                                                                                                                                                                 Schloegel et al. 2012; Galindo-Bustos
                                                  Desmognathus, Dicamptodon, Ensatina,                    Ozark hellbender, Salado salamander
                                                                                                                                                                 2014; Kolby 2014; Kolby et al. 2014).
                                                  Eurycea, Hemidactylium, Necturus,                       (Eurycea chisholmensis), San Marcos
                                                                                                                                                                 Similar mechanisms of transmission
                                                  Phaeognathus, Pseudobranchus,                           salamander (E. nana), Georgetown
                                                                                                                                                                 and persistence in the closely related
                                                  Pseudotriton, Rhyacotriton,                             salamander (E. naufragia), Texas blind
                                                  Stereochilus, and Urspelerpes                           salamander (E. (Typhlomolge) rathbuni),                Bsal pathogen, along with detection of
                                                  (AmphibiaWeb 2015b). Although based                     Barton springs salamander (E. sosorum),                Bsal in captive salamanders imported by
                                                  on the gradient responses, from resisting               Jollyville Plateau salamander (E.                      the pet trade into Great Britain, indicate
                                                  infection to lethal response, among the                 tonkawae), Austin blind salamander (E.                 that global movement of Bsal, similar to
                                                  genera Martel et al. (2014) tested                      waterlooensis), Berry Cave salamander                  that of Bd, is not only possible but is
                                                  experimentally, some of these                           (Gyrinophilus gulolineatus), and the                   already occurring (Cunningham 2015).
                                                  additional species could be at risk from                Alabama waterdog (Necturus                             Considering the occurrence of Bsal in
                                                  Bsal infection or could serve as a carrier,             alabamensis).                                          the global pet trade, the risk to North
                                                  we are not listing species in those                        In addition to those species currently              American native species, and the
                                                  genera because these genera have not                    recognized as federally endangered,                    number of salamanders that are
                                                  yet been tested.                                        threatened, or candidates for listing                  imported into and transported
                                                                                                          under the ESA, 36 species of native                    throughout the United States through
                                                  Vulnerability and Carrier Status of                     salamander from 16 genera are in                       trade, Bsal is likely to be introduced
                                                  Threatened and Endangered Species                       various stages of review for possible                  into and spread throughout native
                                                     None of the salamander species listed                ESA listing in the future (USFWS 2015).                salamander populations in the United
                                                  as endangered or threatened under the                   Of the genera that include native species              States unless immediate action is taken
                                                  ESA in the United States has been                       that we have identified as carriers, the               to limit the import and interstate
                                                  specifically tested for Bsal vulnerability              following species are currently under                  transport of salamanders that are likely
                                                  under laboratory conditions; Bsal has                   review for ESA listing: Limestone                      to carry Bsal.
                                                  not been detected in their wild                         salamander (petitioned), Shasta                           Infected salamanders can transmit
                                                  populations (Martel et al. 2014, Bales et               salamander (petitioned), the black-                    Bsal to other species even if the
                                                  al. 2015). However, several species from                spotted newt (positive 90-day finding                  introduced salamander fails to establish
                                                  the same genera have been tested and on                 completed), Cheoah bald salamander (P.                 a population. Evidence indicates that at
                                                  that basis identified as carriers. As we                cheoah, petitioned), Fourche Mountain                  least some of the salamanders capable of
                                                  describe above in Vulnerability and                     salamander (P. fourchensis, petitioned),               carrying Bsal can escape or be released
                                                  Carrier Status, while the Service did                   Peaks of Otter salamander (P. hubrichti,               and introduce Bsal into the
                                                  find evidence that shows some species                   positive 90-day finding completed),                    environment. As described earlier,
                                                  within a genus may vary in their                        South Mountain gray-cheeked                            evidence exists for release of
                                                  specific vulnerability, the carrier status              salamander (P. meridianus, petitioned),                salamanders into the wild in the United
                                                  of tested species can be extrapolated to                and the white-spotted salamander (P.                   States (Picco and Collins 2008; USGS
                                                  related species including those that are                punctatus, petitioned) (Martel et al.                  2015). As noted above in Invasiveness of
                                                  listed as endangered or threatened, are                 2014; USFWS 2015).                                     Salamanders, the USGS Nonindigenous
                                                  candidates for ESA listing, and under                      Three species under ESA review are                  Aquatic Species database has records for
                                                  review.                                                 members of genera that are not carriers:               14 salamander species that have been
                                                     Of the genera that include native                    (Streamside salamander (Ambystoma                      observed outside their native range. Of
                                                  species that we have identified as                      barbouri) (substantial 90-day finding                  those, 11 are native to the United States
                                                  carriers, the following species are                     completed—76 FR 59836, September 27,                   and were discovered outside of their
                                                  federally listed as threatened or                       2011), Tennessee cave salamander                       native ranges, and 3 are exotic species
                                                  endangered: Jemez Mountains                             (Gyrinophilus palleucus) (substantial                  from outside the United States. These
                                                  salamander (P. neomexicanus), Cheat                     90-day finding completed—76 FR                         findings mean that salamanders have
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                                                  Mountain salamander (P. netting),                       59836, September 27, 2011), West                       been shown to exist, even if
                                                  Shenandoah salamander (P.                               Virginia spring salamander (G.                         temporarily, outside their native range.
                                                  shenandoah) and, one species, the                       subterraneus) (substantial 90-day                      As such, they are capable of
                                                  striped newt (Notophthalmus                             finding completed—76 FR 59836,                         transmitting Bsal into nonindigenous
                                                  perstriatus) is a candidate species                     September 27, 2011) (Martel et al. 2014;               ecosystems. Infected native species that
                                                  (USFWS 2015).                                           USFWS 2015).                                           are imported and escape or are released
                                                     Seven of the species, subspecies, or                    No information is available regarding               into native habitats would also be
                                                  distinct population segments (DPSs)                     the carrier status for the remaining 25                capable of carrying Bsal into native


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                                                  1548             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  salamander ecosystems where Bsal has                    recent years, suggesting that the                      belly newt, and spotless stout newt
                                                  not previously been found.                              propagule pressure may also be a factor                (Pachytriton labiatus).
                                                     Infective Bsal zoospores can also be                 by limiting the number of times in                        According to Richgels et al. (in
                                                  released into the environment if water                  which Bsal could possibly be                           review), ‘‘Although prevalence of Bsal
                                                  or other materials used to house                        introduced through trade (Lockwood et                  in live amphibian shipments,
                                                  infected salamanders enter the                          al. 2005; USFWS OLE 2015). Bd may                      probability of release of infected
                                                  environment due to improper                             have spread more quickly than Bsal                     materials (including live or dead
                                                  disinfection and disposal methods. The                  because of its ability to infect frogs,                animals or wastewater), and likelihood
                                                  water and materials become fomites to                   whereas research suggests that Bsal does               of interaction between infectious
                                                  introduce the fungus into the                           not (Martel et al. 2014). Based on LEMIS               material and naı̈ve free-ranging
                                                  environment if not decontaminated or                    data, frogs are traded in higher volumes               salamanders is unknown, given the
                                                  disposed of properly. As described                      than salamanders, increasing the                       large quantities of imported amphibians,
                                                  above under Environmental Conditions                    probability of trade of a Bd-infected                  even a small probability of infected
                                                  Needed to Survive, Bsal can likely live                 individual over a Bsal-infected                        animals or materials escaping into the
                                                  independent of a host long enough to                    individual. The USGS Nonindigenous                     wild could lead to introduction of
                                                  infect other salamanders. Bd is known                   Aquatic Species database also provides                 [Bsal].’’ As discussed earlier under
                                                  to remain viable for weeks in water and                 evidence for this higher level of trade,               Introduction Pathways and
                                                  moist organic matter. Given our finding                 in that greater numbers of frogs are                   Environmental Conditions Needed to
                                                  that Bd can serve as a surrogate for                    reported than salamanders. In addition,                Survive, Bsal is expected to be able to
                                                  predicting Bsal’s effects in salamanders                many frogs in trade, such as Rana                      survive outside of salamander hosts for
                                                  at the population level, and since Bd                   catesbeiana (bullfrogs), are adaptable to              several weeks given suitable conditions
                                                  does not require an amphibian host to                   a wide variety of environments and can                 in water. If a salamander comes in
                                                  remain viable, we expect that Bsal can                  easily become invasive once released in                contact with Bsal and then transmits it
                                                  also persist outside salamanders (as long               a watershed, as bullfrogs have become                  during a time when salamanders
                                                  as it has sufficient water or soil) long                in the American West (Jennings and                     congregate, such as during breeding as
                                                  enough to come into contact with                        Hayes 1994; Rosen and Schwalbe 1995;                   described above under Habitats,
                                                  uninfected salamanders and start the                    Funk et al. 2011; Sepulveda et al. 2015;               Reproductive Processes, and Seasonal
                                                  disease cycle anew. As stated earlier, we               USGS 2015).                                            Habits, the potential for Bsal to survive,
                                                  also find that Bsal can be transmitted on                 Taken together with the other data we                establish, and spread through animals or
                                                  dead salamanders or body parts.                         reviewed, this evidence suggests that                  animal parts is significant. As we
                                                     As discussed above in Introduction                   Bsal is less likely to enter the United                describe above under How the Fungus
                                                  Pathways, there is evidence that Bd has                 States than Bd. However, without                       Affects Salamanders, Bsal can be
                                                  escaped into the environment through                    action, the pathways for introduction                  transmitted on dead tissue where
                                                  untreated wastewater, increasing the                    and escape of Bsal are a significant and               keratin is present, particularly skin, but
                                                  likelihood that Bsal could also escape if               imminent threat that can best be                       do not find that Bsal can be transmitted
                                                  brought in via contaminated water or                    managed by listing salamanders that can                through reproductive tissue including
                                                  improperly disposed of materials. While                 carry Bsal as injurious wildlife, thereby              eggs and gametes.
                                                  standards for the treatment and                         minimizing opportunities for Bsal to be                   As Richgels et al. (in review) noted,
                                                  prevention of Bd exist, in part due to                  introduced, establish, and spread in the               ‘‘[T]he patterns of global Bd spread
                                                  recognition of its status as an                         United States.                                         suggests that given release, exposure of
                                                  internationally notifiable disease under                                                                       native populations is likely. If Bsal
                                                  the World Organization for Animal                       Potential To Survive, Become                           follows similar patterns to the spread of
                                                  Health (OIE), the effectiveness and                     Established, and Spread                                Bd and no additional risk mitigation
                                                  widespread application of those                            There is evidence that several of the               steps are taken, Bsal is likely to be
                                                  standards are uncertain given that                      species capable of carrying Bsal can                   introduced to the US.’’ The Service
                                                  international protocols for responding to               survive long enough in the wild to                     finds that the capacity of infected
                                                  Bd do not exist and the need to improve                 transmit Bsal. The USGS                                salamanders to serve as the vector for
                                                  international mechanisms to respond to                  Nonindigenous Aquatic Species                          infecting wild salamanders, together
                                                  disease-related threats to biodiversity                 database has records of 14 species and                 with the capacity of Bsal to survive for
                                                  (Voyles et al. 2014).                                   populations that have been observed in                 an extended period independent of an
                                                     Given the number of specimens that                   the United States outside of their native              amphibian host, suggests that Bsal has
                                                  have been imported into the United                      range (USGS 2015). Of those, 11 are                    a high likelihood of surviving,
                                                  States and Canada, it is unclear why                    native and have established populations                establishing, and spreading once it is
                                                  Bsal has not yet been found in these                    outside of their native U.S. range:                    introduced into a new area.
                                                  countries (Muletz et al. 2014; Bales et al.             Eastern tiger salamander (Ambystoma
                                                  2015; Richgels et al. in review; Stephen                tigrinum), barred tiger salamander                     Impacts on Wildlife Resources or
                                                  et al. 2015). A comparison of Bd, which                 (Ambystoma mavortium mavortium),                       Ecosystems
                                                  has spread in the United States, to Bsal                blotched tiger salamander (Ambystoma                      If Bsal is introduced into the United
                                                  yields some insights. Based on genetic                  mavortium melanostictum), long-toed                    States, we expect the species with lethal
                                                  analyses and examination of historical                  salamander (Ambystoma                                  vulnerability would be at greatest risk.
                                                  specimens, Bd may have originated                       macrodactylum), three-toed amphiuma                    However, disease outbreaks can result
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                                                  from different places, including Japan,                 (Amphiuma tridactylum), black-bellied                  from a combination of biotic and abiotic
                                                  South Africa, or South America (Farrer                  salamander (Desmognathus                               factors, including species vulnerability,
                                                  et al. 2011; Rodriguez et al. 2014). In                 quadramaculatus), Santeetlah dusky                     exposure, behavior, immunity, co-
                                                  contrast, Bsal may have originated only                 salamander (Desmognathus santeetlah),                  infections, and environmental
                                                  from Asia, giving it fewer pathways to                  mudpuppy, eastern newt, lesser siren,                  conditions (Wobeser 2007). Therefore,
                                                  the United States (Martel et al. 2014).                 and rough-skinned newt. The three                      the vulnerability of individuals under
                                                  Importation of salamanders into the                     species from outside the United States                 laboratory conditions is an incomplete
                                                  United States has also declined in                      include Japanese newt, Oriental fire                   predictor of disease effects (Wobeser


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                            1549

                                                  2007). Native salamander species                        Welsh 2014). If native U.S. salamander                 specifically tested for Bsal vulnerability
                                                  known to be tolerant of Bsal infection                  species were to experience declines                    under laboratory conditions; Bsal has
                                                  under experimental conditions may                       from Bsal infection as the fire                        not been detected in their wild
                                                  demonstrate more severe clinical                        salamander experienced in the                          populations (Martel et al. 2014, Bales et
                                                  disease when infection is combined                      Netherlands (Spitzen-van der Sluijs et                 al. 2015). Of the genera that include
                                                  with additional stressors in the wild, as               al. 2013), we expect detrimental                       native species that we have identified as
                                                  has been found for other diseases,                      ecological effects.                                    carriers, 4 species are federally listed as
                                                  including those in amphibians (Wobeser                     The eastern newt, one of the lethally               threatened or endangered or are
                                                  2007; Kerby et al. 2011; Kiesecker 2011).               vulnerable species, is one of the most                 candidates for listing. In addition, 8
                                                  For example, Bodinof et al. (2011) noted                widespread salamander species in North                 species of native salamanders from
                                                  that Bd may be found more frequently                    America (Roe and Grayson 2008, Martel                  genera that were identified as carriers
                                                  in hellbenders that are immune-                         et al. 2014). As top predators in pond                 are in various stages of review for
                                                  compromised or that Bd infection                        ecosystems, eastern newts regulate frog                possible ESA listing in the future
                                                  increases the adverse effects of such                   tadpole abundance and, therefore, affect               (USFWS 2015). Because not all species
                                                  species to other infections. Considering                the amount and type of nutrients                       have been tested, it is possible that the
                                                  these cumulative factors, as well as the                available in the ponds, keeping them in                fungus will negatively affect other ESA-
                                                  lack of data for the majority of native                 ecological balance (Morin et al. 1983;                 protected species.
                                                  salamander species, our assessment of                   Morin 1995). If eastern newt
                                                                                                          populations decline because of Bsal                    Impacts to Human Beings, Forestry,
                                                  risk in native species is likely
                                                                                                          infection in the wild, imbalances could                Horticulture, and Agriculture
                                                  conservative.
                                                     Bsal can severely affect wildlife                    result in ponds and ecosystems                            We do not expect direct effects to
                                                  resources. At least 2 native species are                throughout the eastern United States.                  forestry, horticulture, or agriculture.
                                                  lethally vulnerable to Bsal and at least                Eastern newts also travel long distances               Bsal does not appear to infect humans
                                                  1 is tolerant to Bsal infection. At least               between aquatic and terrestrial habitats               or other animals except for salamanders.
                                                  67 native species can act as carriers or                (Roe and Grayson 2008), so if the                      Trees and other plants are also not
                                                  sources of infection for other species.                 species was to be eliminated from an                   affected. Indirectly, the introduction or
                                                  While not all species have been tested                  area, the amount of nutrients available                establishment of Bsal would have
                                                  for their response to Bsal, based on the                in upland areas would also be affected.                negative effects on humans primarily
                                                  high rates of infection that have been                     The other native U.S. species known                 from the loss of native wildlife
                                                  observed, the fungus may have                           to be lethally vulnerable to Bsal, the                 biodiversity. These losses would affect
                                                  significant negative effects on additional              rough-skinned newt, is geographically                  the aesthetic, recreational, and
                                                  species.                                                widespread along the Pacific Coast of                  economic values currently provided by
                                                     As described above in Ecosystem-                     North America from Santa Cruz,                         native wildlife and healthy ecosystems.
                                                  Level Effects, salamanders are important                California, to southeastern Alaska                     Educational values would also be
                                                  parts of the ecosystems in which they                   (Martel et al. 2014; Amphibiaweb                       diminished through the loss of
                                                  occur. They are often the most abundant                 2015a). The rough-skinned newt plays                   biodiversity and ecosystem health.
                                                  vertebrates in their ecosystems, and, as                an important role in ecosystems through                However, we are not listing the species
                                                  a vital part of the food web, they are                  its consumption of invertebrates that                  because of the indirect impacts to
                                                  both important prey for and predators of                break down leaf litter and release carbon              forestry, horticulture, or agriculture, but
                                                  many species (Holomuzki et al. 1994;                    into the atmosphere (Davic and Welsh                   rather due to their impacts to wildlife
                                                  Regester et al. 2006). In some places,                  2004). If rough-skinned newt                           and wildlife resources.
                                                  they are considered keystone species                    populations were to experience severe                  Wildlife or Habitat Damages That May
                                                  that help control some invertebrate                     declines from Bsal infection, a result                 Occur From Control Measures
                                                  populations and affect cycling of                       could be significant additional inputs of
                                                  nutrients in an ecosystem, contributing                 carbon in the atmosphere, as has been                     Richgels et al. (in review) stated,
                                                  significantly to overall ecosystem                      observed with other species (Wyman                     ‘‘[T]here are few known viable treatment
                                                  health. For example, by consuming                       1998; Best and Welsh 2014).                            or management options for responding
                                                  arthropods that would otherwise release                    As Richgels et al. (in review) noted,               to the introduction of Bsal . . . hence
                                                  carbon dioxide into the atmosphere by                   some parts of the United States may                    mitigation strategies should focus on
                                                  decomposing leaf litter in forests,                     reach temperatures above the thermal                   prevention or reduction of introduction
                                                  salamanders slow carbon emissions                       tolerance of Bsal on a seasonal basis.                 events.’’ As discussed below in Ability
                                                  from leaf litter decomposition, which                   However, wildlife and habitats would                   to Prevent or Control the Spread of
                                                  has implications for the global carbon                  suffer losses if local populations of                  Pathogens or Parasites, current control
                                                  cycle (Best and Welsh 2014). As                         salamanders affected by Bsal prior to                  strategies appear to focus on treating
                                                  described earlier, invertebrate species                 temperatures rising as part of the regular             salamanders in a controlled laboratory
                                                  that depend on salamanders for aspects                  seasonal cycle suffered declines (and                  setting. We are not aware of control
                                                  of their life cycle or ecology are likely               possible extirpation) and were unable to               measures that are effective in treating
                                                  to be adversely affected if their host                  return to pre-infection levels in those                infected salamanders over a large-scale
                                                  species declines in response to a Bsal                  ecosystems.                                            area that could eliminate Bsal without
                                                  introduction. Loss of these keystone                       For these reasons, we conclude that                 killing the salamanders themselves.
                                                  species would result in significant                     the negative impact to wildlife resources                 In an effort to control Bsal, it might be
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                                                  ecosystem-level change.                                 or ecosystems is expected to be high if                possible to kill all salamanders in an
                                                     Salamanders constitute much of the                   Bsal is introduced into U.S. ecosystems.               area and repopulate it after the fungus
                                                  vertebrate biomass of forests, and they                                                                        has been given enough time to clear
                                                  play an important role in ecosystems as                 Impact to Threatened and Endangered                    from the environment. However, the life
                                                  insect consumers, shapers of the                        Species and Their Habitats                             history of salamanders makes it highly
                                                  landscape, and climate mediators                          None of the salamander species listed                unlikely that all individuals, including
                                                  (Burton and Likens 1975; Davic and                      as endangered or threatened under the                  those that are infected, could be
                                                  Welsh 2004; Wyman 1998; Best and                        ESA in the United States have been                     completely eradicated. Many species are


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                                                  1550             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  long-lived and inhabit areas that may be                invasive species, the Service is highly                programs to address threats, such as
                                                  hard to reach. In addition, the effects on              concerned about the extensive damage                   infectious disease, to amphibians,
                                                  other wildlife of chemically treating an                that introduction of Bsal would do to                  including salamanders (Harding et al.
                                                  area in order to eradicate infected                     this nation’s resources. As a result, we               2015). Research on booroolong frogs
                                                  salamanders is unknown but could be                     concluded that we cannot rely on                       (Litoria booroolongensis) demonstrated
                                                  expected to be severe.                                  voluntary actions alone to address the                 that exposing them to Bd did not
                                                                                                          severity of the threat that Bsal poses and             improve their chances of mitigating
                                                  Ability To Prevent Escape and
                                                                                                          that other measures to prevent escape                  future reinfection (Cashins et al. 2013).
                                                  Establishment
                                                                                                          and establishment are not sufficient to                We expect, given similarities of Bd to
                                                     We considered whether it was                         ensure Bsal is not successfully                        Bsal, that salamanders will also show a
                                                  practical for an exporting foreign nation               introduced.                                            similar response to Bsal infection. As a
                                                  to produce a health certificate stating                   Therefore, we find that we cannot rely               result, it may not be possible to
                                                  that a possible carrier of Bsal has been                on these approaches to prevent escape                  stimulate an immune response in
                                                  found to be free of the fungus. Such                    and establishment of Bsal and that our                 captive salamander populations that
                                                  action would help ensure that Bsal does                 current capacity to prevent escape and                 would allow them to be reintroduced
                                                  not escape from an exporting nation by                  establishment is low.                                  into ecosystems where Bsal may still
                                                  being carried on an infected salamander.                                                                       exist.
                                                  However, there are significant concerns                 Potential To Eradicate or Manage
                                                                                                                                                                    Therefore, the ability to rehabilitate
                                                  regarding the effectiveness and                         Established Populations
                                                                                                                                                                 disturbed ecosystems is expected to be
                                                  sensitivity of current testing methods                     While some introduced salamanders                   low because the Service would be
                                                  (including the return of false negatives),              in the United States have been                         unable to ensure that it could treat and
                                                  lack of validation and sufficient testing               successfully controlled, such as the                   protect all salamander populations
                                                  capacity, and agency resources required                 lesser siren (which was eliminated from                expected to be affected by Bsal in the
                                                  to conduct inspections, interpret results,              a backyard pond outside its native U.S.                wild.
                                                  and issue health certificates. Although                 range), others such as the three-toed
                                                  some countries may have the necessary                   amphiuma have not (USGS 2015).                         Ability To Prevent or Control the Spread
                                                  skills to prepare a health certification                However, evidence for control is sparse.               of Pathogens or Parasites
                                                  that salamanders are free of Bsal, not all              Given the high rates of infection among                   The ability and effectiveness of
                                                  exporting nations may have the                          salamanders tested by Martel et al.                    measures to prevent or control Bsal is
                                                  necessary skills or resources. Scientists               (2014), and the lack of control measures               currently low. Few options can ensure
                                                  and diagnostic laboratories are also                    for Bsal that could be employed outside                potentially infected salamanders do not
                                                  working to standardize laboratory                       of a controlled facility, it is likely that            carry Bsal. Blooi et al. (2015a) has
                                                  protocols (Ballard, pers. comm.).                       Bsal would persist once introduced into                shown that treating salamanders
                                                     As discussed below in Ability to                     the environment given appropriate                      infected with Bsal by exposing them ‘‘to
                                                  Prevent or Control the Spread of                        environmental conditions, especially if                25 °C [77 °F] for 10 days resulted in
                                                  Pathogens or Parasites, the ability and                 a tolerant or susceptible salamander                   complete clearance of infection and
                                                  effectiveness of measures to prevent or                 established a population and continued                 clinically cured all experimentally
                                                  control Bsal is currently low. While less               to spread Bsal.                                        infected animals. This treatment
                                                  certain, we also expect the ability to                                                                         protocol was validated in naturally
                                                  prevent escape and establishment is also                Ability To Rehabilitate Disturbed                      infected wild fire salamanders.’’ The
                                                  low. Nonregulatory actions, such as                     Ecosystems                                             authors found that temperature
                                                  implementing voluntary Best                                Bsal infection can lead to the loss of              treatment could be an effective option
                                                  Management Practices or individual                      keystone species in the ecosystem. The                 given the host salamander’s thermal
                                                  State action, are possible. The Service,                ability to rehabilitate disturbed                      tolerance. However, the treatment does
                                                  for example, is working with partners                   ecosystems is expected to be low. We                   have some shortcomings. It is unknown
                                                  on efforts such as HabitattitudeTM,                     considered whether the Service’s                       whether all salamander species can
                                                  which encourages responsible consumer                   National Fish Hatchery System (NFHS)                   tolerate the thermal regime required
                                                  actions with respect to pet ownership.                  could be used to maintain salamanders                  (Kolby, pers. comm.). Blooi et al.
                                                  Such actions include finding                            in refugia while areas are treated, much               (2015a) also noted that there is some
                                                  alternatives to releasing pets into the                 as we maintain a population of the San                 uncertainty as to whether the method is
                                                  environment. Voluntary actions, such as                 Marcos salamander, which is listed as                  completely effective, as evidence of Bsal
                                                  applying heat therapy as described in                   threatened, at the Uvalde National Fish                was found after thermal treatment,
                                                  Blooi et al. (2015a) and Blooi et al.                   Hatchery. However, it is impractical to                although it is possible that the evidence
                                                  (2015b), may help reduce the threat                     equip NFHS facilities to be able to                    consisted of dead cells only.
                                                  posed by Bsal. However, at this time it                 rapidly protect numerous salamander                       Other treatment options also exist,
                                                  is not possible to determine the                        populations and maintain them for an                   such as treatment with antifungal
                                                  likelihood of success of such measures.                 extended time such as might be required                medications that can be applied on
                                                     As described earlier under                           due to Bsal’s introduction. Although, as               animals that do not tolerate 25 °C (77 °F)
                                                  Invasiveness of Salamanders and                         described in the next section, a few                   (Martel, pers. comm; Blooi et al. 2015b).
                                                  General Description of Chytrid Fungus,                  options exist to treat individual                      It may be possible to treat amphibians
                                                  salamanders have escaped into the                       salamanders, none have been identified                 in the wild for Bd with antifungals by
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                                                  ecosystem, and Bd, a related fungus, has                that can be used to clear Bsal from a                  capturing individuals and soaking them
                                                  also escaped and established in the                     widespread area. Consequently, we                      in a bath of the chemical, then releasing
                                                  United States. Therefore, we expect the                 expect that once Bsal has been                         them back into the environment. This
                                                  likelihood of the Service’s ability to                  introduced, it will persist and spread                 process does not seem to be as effective
                                                  prevent escape and establishment of                     with little opportunity for widespread                 as desired, but may delay the eventual
                                                  Bsal through infected salamanders to be                 disinfection from ecosystems.                          outcome of an outbreak enough to help
                                                  low. Although voluntary actions are                        Studies have also questioned the                    individuals persist in the population
                                                  vital to help minimize the threat of                    effectiveness of captive-breeding                      (Hardy et al. 2015). Blooi et al. (2015b)


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          1551

                                                  identified a method for treating infected               vulnerability and carrier status of 103                salamanders is high from both live and
                                                  salamanders with a combination of                       species have not been evaluated, many                  dead specimens. Any salamanders that
                                                  antifungals and temperature control that                of which may also be vulnerable to this                are infected and lethally vulnerable may
                                                  successfully cleared Bsal; however, such                potentially deadly fungus. The disease                 die in transport and continue to carry
                                                  treatment worked only for controlled                    may stress species with less lethal                    Bsal into the United States. The risk is
                                                  settings such as those found in a                       vulnerability under wild conditions; if                also high from improper disposal of
                                                  laboratory or conservation facility and is              these species are stressed by other                    materials that might be contaminated by
                                                  impractical to treat widespread areas in                factors, Bsal could cause harm to                      those live or dead specimens. While we
                                                  the natural environment given the likely                additional species in the face of                      cannot list contaminated materials as
                                                  cost, personnel, and time needed to                     cumulative stressors. The benefits that                injurious under the authority of the Act,
                                                  locate and treat all salamanders in the                 these native salamander species provide                by listing the carriers of Bsal, we seek
                                                  wild. As we have noted above under                      to ecosystems, and in turn the                         to prevent the introduction of such
                                                  Environmental Conditions Needed to                      ecosystem services that benefit people,                materials.
                                                  Survive, Bsal is likely capable of                      are significant. The Service concludes                    The Service is not adding eggs or
                                                  persisting in the environment without a                 that preventing Bsal from infecting                    gametes because Bsal does not appear to
                                                  host by transmission to infected                        native salamanders will prevent harmful                affect reproductive tissue such as eggs
                                                  materials. Even if all individuals of a                 effects to the wildlife and wildlife                   or gametes. The Service is not listing
                                                  population could be successfully                        resources of the United States and                     genera that we find are not carriers of
                                                  treated, the threat of reintroduction from              merits listing of salamanders capable of               Bsal because such salamanders are not
                                                  environmental contamination would                       carrying Bsal as injurious.                            capable of introducing Bsal to the
                                                  still exist.                                               Salamanders capable of carrying Bsal                United States or otherwise transmitting
                                                     Given the expected severity of                       have the potential to escape and spread                it to native populations. We are also not
                                                  consequences of Bsal introduction, all                  Bsal. Species capable of carrying Bsal                 listing genera where there is no data,
                                                  imported salamanders that could be                      can survive long enough in the wild to                 even though it is possible that untested
                                                  carriers would need to be treated, which                transmit the fungus or can transmit it to              genera may also be capable of carrying
                                                  is not practical at this time due to the                other carriers while in transit. Bsal can              Bsal.
                                                  limited conditions under which this                     also be introduced and infect native                      For the reasons stated, the Service
                                                  treatment is effective. Not all species                 salamanders by improper disposal of                    finds the 20 genera of salamanders to be
                                                  will tolerate treatment, and reliable                   material that comes in contact with                    injurious to the wildlife and wildlife
                                                  diagnostic capacity is needed to verify                 infected salamanders, and persist long                 resources of the United States. The
                                                  that animals do not carry Bsal following                enough in the environment without a                    potential for Bsal introduction into the
                                                  treatment. If an outbreak occurs, it                    host to represent a threat.                            United States is high, the United States
                                                  would not be practical to locate and                       There is evidence that all species                  has suitable conditions for Bsal survival,
                                                  treat all individuals in the wild in U.S.               within a genus, where at least one                     and the consequences of introduction
                                                  ecosystems. While antifungal agents                     species has been identified as a carrier               into the United States are expected to be
                                                  could be applied to all animals, either                 of Bsal, can also be a threat. Our                     significant and occur across a wide
                                                  in the laboratory or perhaps applied                    analysis found no conclusive evidence                  range of the United States. By listing
                                                  over a large geographic area, we are                    to the contrary. We find that, due to                  species that can carry Bsal, we are
                                                  concerned about side effects on the                     shared characteristics by species within               taking immediate action to help ensure
                                                  animals being treated. We are also                      a genus, other species within these                    the fungus does not enter the United
                                                  concerned about possible negative                       genera are also highly likely to be                    States and infect native salamander
                                                  environmental effects if a chemical was                 carriers of Bsal, even if not every species            populations and cause severe individual
                                                  widely applied (Gyllenhammar et al.                     in the genus has been tested to verify
                                                                                                                                                                 mortality, population declines, and
                                                  2009; Hasselberg et al. 2008).                          that it is a carrier of Bsal. Hybrids
                                                                                                                                                                 ecosystem harm. We are not listing
                                                                                                          consisting of species found entirely
                                                  Any Potential Ecological Benefits to                                                                           genera for which data is unavailable
                                                                                                          within a genus identified as a carrier are
                                                  Introduction                                                                                                   because we do not have a basis for doing
                                                                                                          also expected to be carriers.
                                                                                                                                                                 so.
                                                     There are no known benefits of Bsal                     The main pathway for the global
                                                  or of salamanders carrying Bsal. The                    spread of Bsal is the international trade              Required Determinations
                                                  risks to native wildlife and wildlife                   in salamanders. The most likely
                                                                                                                                                                 Regulatory Planning and Review
                                                  resources greatly outweigh any unlikely                 pathway of a salamander that is a host
                                                  benefits. There are no other potential                  to Bsal into the United States would                     Executive Order 12866 provides that
                                                  ecological benefits for the introduction                include a pet store or online retailer.                the Office of Information and Regulatory
                                                  of Bsal or of Bsal-infected or Bsal-carrier             Listing salamanders that are capable of                Affairs in the Office of Management and
                                                  salamanders into the United States.                     carrying Bsal as injurious wildlife will               Budget (OMB) will review all significant
                                                                                                          significantly confine this pathway and                 rules. The Office of Information and
                                                  Conclusion                                                                                                     Regulatory Affairs has determined that
                                                                                                          limit Bsal’s capacity to be introduced,
                                                    Overall, there is a high risk to the                  establish, and spread in the United                    this rule is not significant.
                                                  wildlife and wildlife resources of the                  States.                                                  Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the
                                                  United States from salamanders that are                    The current capacity to prevent                     principles of Executive Order 12866
                                                  capable of carrying Bsal. The United                    escape and establishment is low.                       while calling for improvements in the
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                                                  States leads all other countries in                     Rehabilitation of disturbed ecosystems                 nation’s regulatory system to promote
                                                  salamander diversity. Of the 190 native                 is expected to be very difficult. The                  predictability, to reduce uncertainty,
                                                  U.S. species, the vulnerability of 7 has                ability and effectiveness of measures to               and to use the best, most innovative,
                                                  been tested. We find that the fungus can                prevent or control Bsal is currently low.              and least burdensome tools for
                                                  infect and is lethal to at least 2                      There are no known benefits of Bsal.                   achieving regulatory ends. The
                                                  salamander species native to the United                    The Service is listing live and dead                executive order directs agencies to
                                                  States and that a total of 67 native                    specimens, including parts. We find the                consider regulatory approaches that
                                                  species are carriers of Bsal. The                       risk of transmission of Bsal to other                  reduce burdens and maintain flexibility


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                                                  1552             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  and freedom of choice for the public                    that can achieve the desired goals of the              imported that would have been sold for
                                                  where these approaches are relevant,                    rule.                                                  an estimated retail value of $41.4
                                                  feasible, and consistent with regulatory                   Alternative 1 was no action. This is                million; the maximum annual loss to
                                                  objectives. Executive Order 13563                       the status quo. We would not list any                  entities that deal in these species would
                                                  emphasizes further that the regulatory                  species of salamanders as injurious. We                be $3.8 million in revenue. The
                                                  system must allow for public                            did not select this option because of the              maximum annual loss to the economy
                                                  participation and an open exchange of                   significant risk that Bsal poses to native             under this alternative is estimated to be
                                                  ideas. We have developed this rule in a                 species and other wildlife resources in                $10.0 million.
                                                  manner consistent with these                            the United States. We expect that                         Alternative 4 was listing all
                                                  principles.                                             significantly greater financial and                    salamanders in the world. There are
                                                     Executive Order 12866, Economic                      natural resources losses will be incurred              approximately 681 species of
                                                  Analysis of Federal Regulations under                   by us and our partners in having to                    salamanders. Although some species
                                                  Executive Order 12866 (OMB 1996), and                   manage and respond to Bsal if the                      that we are not listing may be negatively
                                                  Circular A–4 (OMB 2003) identify                        fungus establishes and spreads in the                  vulnerable to or serve as carriers of Bsal,
                                                  guidelines or ‘‘best practices’’ for the                United States than by taking action now                we are taking immediate action against
                                                  economic analysis of Federal                            to prevent and minimize its                            those species that current scientific
                                                  regulations. In the context of the                      introduction. No loss of retail sales or               research and analysis has confirmed are
                                                  specific regulation under consideration,                economic output due to actions by the                  carriers of Bsal, along with other species
                                                  we anticipate minor economic impacts.                   Service would result from this                         in the genus that share the same traits
                                                     The rule listing 20 genera of                        alternative. It is expected that costs                 that make them highly likely to be
                                                  salamanders would prohibit an                           would be incurred by the salamander                    carriers of Bsal. Between 2004 and 2014
                                                  estimated 217,000 salamanders from                      and ancillary industries due to Bsal                   (USFWS OLE 2015), 2.5 million
                                                  being imported per year, and a                          management and the impact of Bsal on                   salamanders were imported that would
                                                  minimum of 338 domestically bred                        the supply of salamanders.                             have been sold for an estimated retail
                                                                                                             Alternative 2 was listing only those                value of $43.9 million. The maximum
                                                  salamanders may be affected due to the
                                                                                                          species that Martel et al. (2014) and                  annual loss to entities that deal in these
                                                  interstate transportation prohibition.
                                                                                                          Cunningham et al. (2015) (as explained                 species is estimated to be $4.0 million
                                                  The maximum annual loss to entities
                                                                                                          further in Chytridcrisis 2015b)                        in revenue. The maximum annual loss
                                                  that deal in these species is $3.8 million
                                                                                                          confirmed are carriers of Bsal. The list               to the economy under this alternative is
                                                  in revenue. The maximum annual loss
                                                                                                          of species that Martel et al. (2014) and               estimated to be $10.7 million.
                                                  to the economy is estimated to be $10.0
                                                                                                          Cunningham et al. (2015) evaluated is                     Alternative 5 would have required a
                                                  million. The preferred alternative                      considerably smaller and consists of 27                health certificate that must accompany
                                                  (Alternative 3, described below) does                   species. As described earlier in                       salamanders being imported and
                                                  not meet the cost criteria for a                        Vulnerability and Carrier Status, we                   transported across State lines that states
                                                  significant rule. Furthermore, the                      have determined that all species in a                  that the animal being imported or
                                                  preferred alternative is not expected to                genus will share similar characteristics               moved through interstate movement is
                                                  have a significant economic impact on                   that make them capable of serving as a                 free of Bsal in lieu of or in addition to
                                                  a substantial number of small entities.                 carrier of Bsal. Between 2004 and 2014                 listing. The Service did not select this
                                                     In the long term, the rule is expected               (USFWS OLE 2015), 1.6 million                          option because of concerns regarding
                                                  to benefit the economy. Efforts to                      salamanders of these species were                      the effectiveness of current testing
                                                  control or eradicate invasive species,                  imported that would have been sold for                 methods, the lack of available testing
                                                  and manage the costs they incur to                      an estimated retail value of $22.8                     capacity, expenses associated with
                                                  society, once they have become                          million; the maximum annual loss to                    testing each shipment, and inadequate
                                                  established are generally recognized as                 entities that deal in these species would              agency resources to conduct
                                                  being less effective and more expensive                 be $2.1 million in revenue. The                        inspections, interpret the results, and
                                                  than efforts to prevent potentially                     maximum annual loss to the economy                     issue health certificates. It is uncertain
                                                  invasive species from establishing in the               under this alternative is estimated to be              what the loss in revenue and economic
                                                  first place (Leung et al. 2002, Finnoff et              $5.6 million.                                          output would be due to this alternative.
                                                  al. 2007). As a result, sectors of the                     Alternative 3 was listing all species in            The minimum effect would be identical
                                                  economy that will not need to expend                    genera where there is at least one                     to Alternative 1 (No Action), and the
                                                  resources to control or manage injurious                confirmed carrier and all species in that              maximum effect would be that of
                                                  wildlife will be expected to gain from a                genus are likely to be a carrier. As we                Alternative 4 (prohibiting all
                                                  timely listing process.                                 described earlier, we have a sound                     salamanders). The effect on the number
                                                     The Service considered five                          scientific basis to conclude that all                  imported or transported depends on the
                                                  alternatives under Executive Order                      species in a genus will share similar                  cost of compliance. Therefore, of the 2.5
                                                  12866 for the economic analysis for this                characteristics in regards to whether                  million salamanders that were imported
                                                  rule: (1) No action; (2) listing species                they are capable of serving as a carrier               between 2004 and 2014 (USFWS OLE
                                                  that were identified by Martel et al.                   of Bsal. Martel et al. (2014) did not find             2015), all or none may have been
                                                  (2014) and other sources to be carriers                 any examples of species in a genus                     imported or transported under these
                                                  of Bsal; (3) listing all species in genera              where one species was likely to be a                   circumstances. They would have been
                                                  in which there is at least one confirmed                carrier and another species was not,                   sold for up to an estimated retail value
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                                                  carrier and all species in the genus are                with two exceptions as discussed above.                of $43.9 million. The maximum annual
                                                  likely to be a carrier; (4) listing all                 Given the significant risk that Bsal                   loss to entities that deal in these species
                                                  salamanders; and (5) requiring a health                 poses, we find it is important to list all             is $4.0 million in revenue. The
                                                  certificate stating that the animal being               species that are likely to be carriers of              maximum annual loss to the economy is
                                                  moved is free of Bsal, in lieu of or in                 the fungus. This alternative was selected              estimated to be $10.7 million.
                                                  addition to listing. The purpose of                     for this interim rule. Between 2004 and                   We considered other alternatives that
                                                  considering alternatives is to identify                 2014 (USFWS OLE 2015), 2.4 million                     we rejected because we do not have the
                                                  whether there is a more effective option                salamanders of these genera were                       authority under the Lacey Act to


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                           1553

                                                  implement them ourselves. For                           hybrids. (However, this rule does not                  Act is not more than 6 months in prison
                                                  example, we do not have the authority                   include provisions pertaining to                       and not more than a $5,000 fine for an
                                                  or capacity to establish and enforce a                  gametes and viable eggs.)                              individual and not more than a $10,000
                                                  quarantine system. As a result, we                         The ultimate effects of any listing on              fine for an organization.
                                                  cannot require all shipments to wait in                 these entities would depend on the                        b. Would not cause a major increase
                                                  quarantine for a period of time sufficient              amount of interstate sales within the                  in costs or prices for consumers,
                                                  to prove that imported animals do not                   taxon’s market. Impacts would also                     individual industries, Federal, State, or
                                                  carry Bsal or to treat them                             depend upon whether or not close                       local government agencies, or
                                                  prophylactically.                                       substitutes for the species listed by this             geographic regions. Businesses breeding
                                                    We also considered encouraging                        rule exist. In this case, the rule:                    or selling the listed salamanders would
                                                  partners to take nonregulatory action,                     a. Will not have an annual effect on                be able to substitute other species and
                                                  such as voluntary Best Management                       the economy of $100 million or more.                   maintain business. Some businesses,
                                                  Practices or individual State action. The                  b. Would not cause a major increase                 however, may close. We do not have
                                                  Service will pursue such actions as it                  in costs or prices for consumers,                      data for the potential substitutions, and,
                                                  moves forward, and we are working                       individual industries, Federal, State, or              therefore, we do not know the number
                                                  with partners on efforts such as                        local government agencies, or                          of businesses that may close.
                                                  HabitattitudeTM, which encourages                       geographic regions.                                       c. Would not have significant adverse
                                                  responsible consumer actions with                          c. Would not have significant adverse               effects on competition, employment,
                                                  respect to pet ownership. Voluntary                     effects on competition, employment,                    investment, productivity, innovation, or
                                                  actions, such as applying heat therapy                  investment, productivity, innovation, or               the ability of United States-based
                                                  as described in Blooi et al. (2015a) and                the ability of United States-based                     enterprises to compete with foreign-
                                                  Blooi et al. (2015b), may help reduce the               enterprises to compete with foreign-                   based enterprises.
                                                  threat posed by Bsal. Although                          based enterprises.
                                                  voluntary actions are vital to help                        Listing 20 genera of salamanders                    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2
                                                  minimize the threat of invasive species,                would prohibit an estimated 217,000                    U.S.C. 1501 et seq.)
                                                  the Service is highly concerned about                   salamanders imported per year; 338                        In accordance with the Unfunded
                                                  the extensive damage that introduction                  domestically bred salamanders would                    Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1501),
                                                  of Bsal would do to this nation’s                       face the interstate transportation                     the Service makes the following
                                                  resources and concluded that we cannot                  prohibition. The maximum annual loss                   findings:
                                                  rely on voluntary actions alone in this                 to entities that deal in these species is                 a. This rule would not produce a
                                                  instance to address the severity of the                 $3.8 million in revenue. Small                         Federal mandate. In general, a Federal
                                                  threat that Bsal poses.                                 businesses are expected to incur $2.3                  mandate is a provision in legislation,
                                                                                                          million of the burden. Impacts per small               statute, or regulation that would impose
                                                  Regulatory Flexibility Act                              business may be as high as $453,000 for                an enforceable duty upon State, local, or
                                                     The Secretary of the Interior certifies              importers and $23,000 for domestic                     tribal governments, or the private sector.
                                                  that this rule will not have a significant              breeders.                                                 b. The rule would not have a
                                                  economic impact on a substantial                           The interim rule makes no changes in                significant or unique effect on State,
                                                  number of small entities. A regulatory                  the compliance requirements of any                     local, or tribal governments or the
                                                  flexibility analysis under the Regulatory               business. The Service is unaware of any                private sector. A statement containing
                                                  Flexibility Act (as amended by the                      duplicative, overlapping, or conflicting               the information required by the
                                                  Small Business Regulatory Enforcement                   Federal rules. Several States implement                Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2
                                                  Fairness Act [SBREFA] of 1996) (5                       similar acts that are more restrictive                 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not required.
                                                  U.S.C. 601, et seq.), is not required. The              than the Federal law.
                                                  factual basis for this certification is                                                                        Takings
                                                                                                          Small Business Regulatory Enforcement                    In accordance with Executive Order
                                                  provided in a draft regulatory flexibility
                                                                                                          Fairness Act                                           12630 (Government Actions and
                                                  analysis in the economic analysis,
                                                  prepared to accompany this rule, which                     The interim rule is not a major rule                Interference with Constitutionally
                                                  we briefly summarize below. See FOR                     under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small                       Protected Private Property Rights), the
                                                  FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT or http://                  Business Regulatory Enforcement                        rule does not have significant takings
                                                  www.regulations.gov under Docket No.                    Fairness Act. This rule:                               implications. A takings implication
                                                  FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–0005 for the                               a. Would not have an annual effect on               assessment is not required. This rule
                                                  complete document.                                      the economy of $100 million or more.                   would not impose significant
                                                     Although an interim rule allows us to                The rule listing 20 genera of                          requirements or limitations on private
                                                  move more quickly to implement the                      salamanders, including 201 species,                    property use. While import and
                                                  listing, it does not change the                         would prohibit an estimated 217,000                    interstate transport of any of the listed
                                                  substantive basis for the listing decision,             salamanders imported per year, and                     species is prohibited, any person who
                                                  modify the types of organizations that                  prohibit the interstate movement of at                 currently owns one of the listed species
                                                  would be affected by the rule, or affect                least 338 domestically bred individuals.               can continue to possess the salamander
                                                  the future administration of the Act as                 The maximum annual loss to entities                    and engage in intrastate transport and
                                                  it applies to small entities to which the               that deal in these species is $3.8 million             other activities within their State or
                                                  listing decision applies. In general,                   in revenue. Small businesses are                       territory, as allowed under State, tribal,
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                                                  entities that are affected by an injurious              expected to incur $2.3 million of the                  or territorial law.
                                                  listing decision would include:                         burden. Impacts per small business may
                                                     (1) entities importing animals,                      be as high as $453,000 for importers and               Federalism
                                                  gametes, viable eggs, and hybrids of                    $23,000 for domestic breeders. In                         In accordance with Executive Order
                                                  species; and                                            addition, businesses would also face the               13132 (Federalism), this interim rule
                                                     (2) entities (including breeders and                 risk of fines if caught transporting these             does not have significant Federalism
                                                  wholesalers) with interstate sales of                   salamanders or their parts across State                effects. A Federalism assessment is not
                                                  animals, gametes, viable eggs, and                      lines. The penalty for violation of the                required. This rule would not have any


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                                                  1554             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                  direct effects on States, on the                        the rule does not involve any of the                   Energy Effects when undertaking certain
                                                  relationship between the Federal                        extraordinary circumstances listed in 43               actions. This rule is not expected to
                                                  Government and the States, or on the                    CFR 46.215 that would require further                  affect energy supplies, distribution, and
                                                  distribution of power and                               analysis under NEPA.                                   use. Therefore, this action is a not a
                                                  responsibilities among the various                                                                             significant energy action and no
                                                                                                          Clarity of Rule
                                                  levels of government. Therefore, in                                                                            Statement of Energy Effects is required.
                                                  accordance with Executive Order 13132,                     We are required by Executive Orders
                                                  we determine that this rule does not                    12866 and 12988 and by the                             References Cited
                                                  have sufficient Federalism implications                 Presidential Memorandum of June 1,                       A complete list of all references used
                                                  to warrant the preparation of a                         1998, to write all rules in plain                      in this rulemaking is available at
                                                  Federalism Assessment.                                  language. This means that each rule we                 http://www.regulations.gov under
                                                                                                          publish must:                                          Docket No. FWS–HQ–FAC–2015–0005.
                                                  Civil Justice Reform                                       a. Be logically organized;
                                                     In accordance with Executive Order                      b. Use the active voice to address                  Authors
                                                  12988, the Office of the Solicitor has                  readers directly;                                        The primary authors of this interim
                                                  determined that the interim rule does                      c. Use clear language rather than                   rule are the staff members of the U.S.
                                                  not unduly burden the judicial system                   jargon;                                                Fish and Wildlife Service.
                                                  and meets the requirements of sections                     d. Be divided into short sections and
                                                  3(a) and 3(b)(2) of the Executive Order.                sentences; and                                         List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 16
                                                  The interim rule has been reviewed to                      e. Use lists and tables wherever                      Fish, Imports, Reporting and
                                                  eliminate drafting errors and ambiguity,                possible.                                              recordkeeping requirements,
                                                  was written to minimize litigation,                        If you feel that we have not met these              Transportation, Wildlife.
                                                  provides a clear legal standard for                     requirements, send us comments by one
                                                                                                          of the methods listed in ADDRESSES. To                 Regulation Promulgation
                                                  affected conduct rather than a general
                                                  standard, and promotes simplification                   help us revise the rule, your comments                   For the reasons discussed in the
                                                  and burden reduction.                                   should be as specific as possible. For                 preamble, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
                                                                                                          example, you should tell us the                        Service amends part 16, subchapter B of
                                                  Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44                     numbers of the sections or paragraphs                  chapter I, title 50 of the Code of Federal
                                                  U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)                                    that are unclearly written, which                      Regulations, as follows:
                                                     This rule does not contain any new                   sections or sentences are too long, and
                                                  collections of information that require                 the sections where you feel lists or                   PART 16—[AMENDED]
                                                  approval by OMB under the Paperwork                     tables would be useful.
                                                  Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501                                                                          ■ 1. The authority citation for part 16
                                                  et seq.). This rule will not impose new                 Government-to-Government                               continues to read as follows:
                                                  recordkeeping or reporting requirements                 Relationship With Tribes                                   Authority: 18 U.S.C. 42.
                                                  on State or local governments,                             In accordance with the President’s                  ■   2. Revise § 16.14 to read as follows:
                                                  individuals, businesses, or                             memorandum of April 29, 1994,
                                                  organizations. OMB has approved the                     ‘‘Government-to-Government Relations                   § 16.14 Importation of live or dead
                                                  information collection requirements                     with Native American Tribal                            amphibians or their eggs.
                                                  associated with the required permits                    Governments’’ (59 FR 22951), Executive                    (a) The importation, transportation, or
                                                  and assigned OMB Control No. 1018–                      Order 13175, and the Department of the                 acquisition of any live or dead
                                                  0093, which expires May 31, 2017. We                    Interior’s manual at 512 DM 2, we                      specimen, including parts, but not eggs
                                                  may not conduct or sponsor, and you                     readily acknowledge our responsibility                 or gametes, of the genera Chioglossa,
                                                  are not required to respond to, a                       to communicate meaningfully with                       Cynops, Euproctus, Hydromantes,
                                                  collection of information unless it                     recognized Federal tribes on a                         Hynobius, Ichthyosaura, Lissotriton,
                                                  displays a currently valid OMB control                  government-to-government basis. In                     Neurergus, Notophthalmus,
                                                  number.                                                 accordance with Secretarial Order 3206                 Onychodactylus, Paramesotriton,
                                                                                                          of June 5, 1997 (American Indian Tribal                Plethodon, Pleurodeles, Salamandra,
                                                  National Environmental Policy Act
                                                                                                          Rights, Federal-Tribal Trust                           Salamandrella, Salamandrina, Siren,
                                                     We have reviewed this rule in                        Responsibilities, and the Endangered                   Taricha, Triturus, and Tylototriton,
                                                  accordance with the criteria of the                     Species Act), we readily acknowledge                   including but not limited to, the species
                                                  National Environmental Policy Act                       our responsibilities to work directly                  listed in this paragraph, is prohibited
                                                  (NEPA) and our Departmental Manual                      with tribes in developing programs for                 except as provided under the terms and
                                                  in 516 DM. This rule does not constitute                healthy ecosystems, to acknowledge that                conditions set forth at § 16.22 of this
                                                  a major Federal action significantly                    tribal lands are not subject to the same               part:
                                                  affecting the quality of the human                      controls as Federal public lands, to                      (1) Chioglossa lusitanica (golden
                                                  environment. Under Department of the                    remain sensitive to Indian culture, and                striped salamander).
                                                  Interior agency policy and procedures,                  to make information available to tribes.                  (2) Cynops chenggongensis
                                                  this rule is covered by a categorical                   We have evaluated potential effects on                 (Chenggong fire-bellied newt).
                                                  exclusion and preparation of a detailed                 federally recognized Indian tribes and                    (3) Cynops cyanurus (blue-tailed fire-
                                                  statement under NEPA is not required                    have determined that there are no                      bellied newt).
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                  because it adds species to the list of                  potential effects. This rule involves the                 (4) Cynops ensicauda (sword-tailed
                                                  injurious wildlife under 50 CFR                         importation and interstate movement of                 newt).
                                                  subchapter B, part 16, which prohibits                  salamanders. We are unaware of such                       (5) Cynops fudingensis (Fuding fire-
                                                  the importation into the United States                  movement in these species by tribes.                   bellied newt).
                                                  and interstate transport of wildlife                                                                              (6) Cynops glaucus (bluish grey newt,
                                                  found to be injurious. (For further                     Effects on Energy                                      Huilan Rongyuan).
                                                  information, see 80 FR 66554; October                     Executive Order 13211 requires                          (7) Cynops orientalis (Oriental fire
                                                  29, 2015.) We have also determined that                 agencies to prepare Statements of                      belly newt, Oriental fire-bellied newt).


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          1555

                                                    (8) Cynops orphicus (no common                           (42) Hynobius naevius (blotched                        (77) Onychodactylus japonicus
                                                  name).                                                  salamander).                                           (Japanese clawed salamander).
                                                    (9) Cynops pyrrhogaster (Japanese                        (43) Hynobius nebulosus (misty                         (78) Onychodactylus kinneburi
                                                  newt, Japanese fire-bellied newt).                      salamander).                                           (Shikoku clawed salamander).
                                                    (10) Cynops wolterstorffi (Kunming                       (44) Hynobius nigrescens (black                        (79) Onychodactylus koreanus (Korai-
                                                  Lake newt).                                             salamander).                                           Sansyouo).
                                                    (11) Euproctus montanus (Corsican                        (45) Hynobius okiensis (Oki                            (80) Onychodactylus nipponoborealis
                                                  brook salamander).                                      salamander).                                           (Riben Bei Zhaoni).
                                                    (12) Euproctus platycephalus                             (46) Hynobius osumiensis (Osumi-                       (81) Onychodactylus tsukubaensis
                                                  (Sardinian brook salamander).                           sanshouo).                                             (Tsukuba clawed salamander).
                                                    (13) Hydromantes ambrosii (Ambrosi                       (47) Hynobius quelpaertensis (no                       (82) Onychodactylus zhangyapingi
                                                  salamander).                                            common name).                                          (Jilin Zhaoni).
                                                    (14) Hydromantes brunus (limestone                       (48) Hynobius retardatus (Hokkaido                     (83) Onychodactylus zhaoermii
                                                  salamander).                                            salamander).                                           (Liaoning).
                                                    (15) Hydromantes flavus (Mount Albo                      (49) Hynobius shinichisatoi (Sobo-                     (84) Paramesotriton caudopunctatus
                                                  cave salamander).                                       sanshouo).                                             (spot-tailed warty newt).
                                                    (16) Hydromantes genei (Sardinian                        (50) Hynobius sonani (Sonan’s                          (85) Paramesotriton chinensis
                                                  cave salamander).                                       hynobiid).                                             (Chinese warty newt).
                                                    (17) Hydromantes imperialis (imperial                    (51) Hynobius stejnegeri (Bekko                        (86) Paramesotriton deloustali (no
                                                  cave salamander).                                       Sansho-uo).                                            common name).
                                                    (18) Hydromantes italicus (Italian                       (52) Hynobius takedai (Hokuriku                        (87) Paramesotriton fuzhongensis (no
                                                  cave salamander).                                       Sansho-uo).                                            common name).
                                                    (19) Hydromantes platycephalus                           (53) Hynobius tokyoensis (Tokyo                        (88) Paramesotriton guanxiensis
                                                  (Mount Lyell salamander).                               salamander).                                           (Guangxi warty newt).
                                                    (20) Hydromantes sarrabusensis (no                       (54) Hynobius tsuensis (Tsushima                       (89) Paramesotriton hongkongensis
                                                  common name).                                           Sansho-uo).                                            (no common name).
                                                    (21) Hydromantes shastae (Shasta                         (55) Hynobius turkestanicus                            (90) Paramesotriton labiatus (spotless
                                                  salamander).                                            (Turkestanian salamander).                             stout newt).
                                                    (22) Hydromantes strinatii or                            (56) Hynobius yangi (no common                         (91) Paramesotriton longliensis (no
                                                  Speleomantes strinatii (French cave                     name).                                                 common name).
                                                  salamander, Strinati’s cave salamander).                   (57) Hynobius yatsui (no common                        (92) Paramesotriton maolanensis (no
                                                    (23) Hydromantes supramontis                          name).                                                 common name).
                                                                                                             (58) Hynobius yiwuensis (Yiwu                          (93) Paramesotriton qixilingensis (no
                                                  (Supramonte cave salamander).
                                                    (24) Hynobius abei (Abe’s                             hynobiid).                                             common name).
                                                                                                             (59) Ichthyosaura alpestris (alpine
                                                  salamander).                                                                                                      (94) Paramesotriton wulingensis (no
                                                                                                          newt).
                                                    (25) Hynobius amakusaensis                                                                                   common name).
                                                                                                             (60) Lissotriton boscai (Bosca’s newt).
                                                  (Amakusa-sanshouo).                                                                                               (95) Paramesotriton yunwuensis (no
                                                                                                             (61) Lissotriton helveticus (palmate
                                                    (26) Hynobius amjiensis (Anji                                                                                common name).
                                                                                                          newt).
                                                  salamander).                                               (62) Lissotriton italicus (Italian newt).              (96) Paramesotriton zhijinensis (no
                                                    (27) Hynobius arisanensis (Arisan                        (63) Lissotriton kosswigi (Triton                   common name).
                                                  hynobid).                                               pontue de Kosswig).                                       (97) Plethodon ainsworthi (Catahoula
                                                    (28) Hynobius boulengeri (Odaigahara                     (64) Lissotriton lantzi (no common                  salamander, bay springs salamander).
                                                  salamander).                                            name).                                                    (98) Plethodon albagula (western
                                                    (29) Hynobius chinensis (Chinese                         (65) Lissotriton montandoni                         slimy salamander).
                                                  salamander).                                            (Carpathian newt).                                        (99) Plethodon amplus (Blue Ridge
                                                    (30) Hynobius dunni (Oita                                (66) Lissotriton vulgaris (smooth                   gray-cheeked salamander).
                                                  salamander).                                            newt).                                                    (100) Plethodon angusticlavius (Ozark
                                                    (31) Hynobius formosanus (Taiwan                         (67) Neurergus crocatus (no common                  salamander, Ozark zigzag salamander).
                                                  salamander).                                            name).                                                    (101) Plethodon asupak (Scott Bar
                                                    (32) Hynobius fucus or Hynobius fuca                     (68) Neurergus derjugini or Neurergus               salamander).
                                                  (Taiwan lesser salamander).                             microspilotus (Kurdistan newt).                           (102) Plethodon aureolus (Tellico
                                                    (33) Hynobius glacialis (Nanhu                           (69) Neurergus kaiseri (Lorestan newt,              salamander).
                                                  salamander).                                            Luristan newt, emperor spotted newt,                      (103) Plethodon caddoensis (Caddo
                                                    (34) Hynobius guabangshanensis (no                    Zagros newt, Iranian harlequin newt,                   Mountain salamander).
                                                  common name).                                           kaiser newt).                                             (104) Plethodon chattahoochee
                                                    (35) Hynobius hidamontanus (Hakuba                       (70) Neurergus strauchii (no common                 (Chattahoochee slimy salamander).
                                                  salamander).                                            name).                                                    (105) Plethodon cheoah (Cheoah bald
                                                    (36) Hynobius hirosei (no common                         (71) Notophthalmus meridionalis                     salamander).
                                                  name).                                                  (black-spotted newt).                                     (106) Plethodon chlorobryonis
                                                    (37) Hynobius katoi (Akaishi sansho-                     (72) Notophthalmus perstriatus                      (Atlantic Coast slimy salamander).
                                                  uo).                                                    (striped newt).                                           (107) Plethodon cinereus (eastern red-
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                    (38) Hynobius kimurae (Hida                              (73) Notophthalmus viridescens                      backed salamander, redback
                                                  salamander).                                            (eastern newt).                                        salamander, salamandre rayée, red-
                                                    (39) Hynobius leechii (northeastern                      (74) Onychodactylus fischeri (long-                 backed salamander).
                                                  China hynobiid salamander).                             tailed clawed salamander).                                (108) Plethodon cylindraceus (white-
                                                    (40) Hynobius lichenatus (northeast                      (75) Onychodactylus fuscus (Tadami                  spotted slimy salamander).
                                                  salamander).                                            clawed salamander).                                       (109) Plethodon dorsalis (zigzag
                                                    (41) Hynobius maoershanensis (no                         (76) Onychodactylus intermedius                     salamander, northern zigzag
                                                  common name).                                           (Bandai clawed salamander).                            salamander).


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                                                  1556             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 8 / Wednesday, January 13, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                     (110) Plethodon dunni (Dunn’s                           (142) Plethodon teyahalee (Southern                    (178) Triturus marmoratus (marbled
                                                  salamander).                                            Appalachian salamander).                               newt).
                                                     (111) Plethodon electromorphus                          (143) Plethodon vandykei (Van Dyke’s                   (179) Triturus pygmaeus (pygmy
                                                  (northern ravine salamander).                           salamander).                                           marbled newt).
                                                     (112) Plethodon elongatus (Del Norte                    (144) Plethodon variolatus (South                      (180) Triturus vittatus (no common
                                                  salamander).                                            Carolina slimy salamander).                            name).
                                                     (113) Plethodon fourchensis (Fourche                    (145) Plethodon vehiculum (western                     (181) Tylototriton anguliceps
                                                  Mountain salamander).                                   red-backed salamander).                                (angular-headed newt).
                                                     (114) Plethodon glutinosus (slimy                       (146) Plethodon ventralis (southern                    (182) Tylototriton asperrimus (black
                                                  salamander, northern slimy                              zigzag salamander).                                    knobby newt).
                                                  salamander).                                               (147) Plethodon virginia (Shenandoah                   (183) Tylototriton broadoridgus (no
                                                     (115) Plethodon grobmani                             Mountain salamander).                                  common name).
                                                  (southeastern slimy salamander).                           (148) Plethodon websteri (Webster’s                    (184) Tylototriton dabienicus (no
                                                     (116) Plethodon hoffmani (valley and                 salamander).                                           common name).
                                                  ridge salamander).                                         (149) Plethodon wehrlei (Wehrle’s                      (185) Tylototriton daweishanensis (no
                                                     (117) Plethodon hubrichti (Peaks of                  salamander).                                           common name).
                                                                                                             (150) Plethodon welleri (Weller’s                      (186) Tylototriton hainanensis
                                                  Otter salamander).
                                                                                                          salamander).                                           (Hainan knobby newt).
                                                     (118) Plethodon idahoensis (Coeur                                                                              (187) Tylototriton kweichowensis
                                                  d’Alene salamander).                                       (151) Plethodon yonahlossee
                                                                                                          (Yonahlossee salamander).                              (red-tailed knobby newt).
                                                     (119) Plethodon jordani (Appalachian                                                                           (188) Tylototriton liuyangensis (no
                                                  salamander, red-cheeked salamander,                        (152) Pleurodeles nebulosus (no
                                                                                                          common name).                                          common name).
                                                  Jordan’s salamander).                                                                                             (189) Tylototriton lizhenchangi
                                                     (120) Plethodon kentucki (Kentucky                      (153) Pleurodeles poireti (Algerian
                                                                                                          newt).                                                 (Mangshan crocodile newt).
                                                  salamander, Cumberland Plateau                                                                                    (190) Tylototriton notialis (no
                                                  salamander).                                               (154) Pleurodeles waltl (Spanish
                                                                                                          newt).                                                 common name).
                                                     (121) Plethodon kiamichi (Kiamichi                                                                             (191) Tylototriton panhai (no
                                                  slimy salamander).                                         (155) Salamandra algira (Algerian
                                                                                                                                                                 common name).
                                                     (122) Plethodon kisatchie (Louisiana                 salamander).                                              (192) Tylototriton pseudoverrucosus
                                                  slimy salamander).                                         (156) Salamandra atra (alpine
                                                                                                                                                                 (southern Sichuan crocodile newt).
                                                     (123) Plethodon larselli (Larch                      salamander).                                              (193) Tylototriton shanjing (Yunnan
                                                  Mountain salamander).                                      (157) Salamandra corsica (Corsican                  newt).
                                                     (124) Plethodon meridianus (South                    fire salamander).                                         (194) Tylototriton shanorum (no
                                                  Mountain gray-cheeked salamander,                          (158) Salamandra infraimmaculata                    common name).
                                                  southern gray-cheeked salamander).                      (no common name).                                         (195) Tylototriton taliangensis
                                                     (125) Plethodon metcalfi (southern                      (159) Salamandra lanzai (Lanza’s                    (Thailand newt).
                                                  gray-cheeked salamander).                               alpine salamander, Salamandra di                          (196) Tylototriton uyenoi (no common
                                                     (126) Plethodon mississippi                          Lanza).                                                name).
                                                                                                             (160) Salamandra salamandra (fire                      (197) Tylototriton verrucosus
                                                  (Mississippi slimy salamander).
                                                     (127) Plethodon montanus (northern                   salamander).                                           (Himalayan newt).
                                                                                                             (161) Salamandrella keyserlingii                       (198) Tylototriton vietnamensis (no
                                                  gray-cheeked salamander).
                                                                                                          (Siberian newt).                                       common name).
                                                     (128) Plethodon neomexicanus (Jemez
                                                                                                             (162) Salamandrella tridactyla (no                     (199) Tylototriton wenxianensis
                                                  Mountains salamander).
                                                                                                          common name).                                          (Wenxian knobby newt).
                                                     (129) Plethodon nettingi (Cheat
                                                                                                             (163) Salamandrina perspicillata                       (200) Tylototriton yangi (Tiannan
                                                  Mountain salamander).
                                                                                                          (northern spectacled salamander).                      crocodile newt).
                                                     (130) Plethodon ocmulgee (Ocmulgee                      (164) Salamandrina terdigitata                         (201) Tylototriton ziegleri (Ziegler’s
                                                  slimy salamander).                                      (southern spectacled salamander).                      crocodile newt).
                                                     (131) Plethodon ouachitae (Rich                         (165) Siren intermedia (lesser siren).                 (b) Upon the filing of a written
                                                  Mountain salamander).                                      (166) Siren lacertina (greater siren).              declaration with the District Director of
                                                     (132) Plethodon petraeus (Pigeon                        (167) Taricha granulosa (rough-                     Customs at the port of entry as required
                                                  Mountain salamander).                                   skinned newt).                                         under § 14.61 of this chapter, all other
                                                     (133) Plethodon punctatus (white-                       (168) Taricha rivularis (red-bellied                species of amphibians may be imported,
                                                  spotted salamander, cow knob                            newt).                                                 transported, and possessed in captivity,
                                                  salamander).                                               (169) Taricha sierrae (Sierra newt).                without a permit, for scientific, medical,
                                                     (134) Plethodon richmondi (southern                     (170) Taricha torosa (California newt).             education, exhibition, or propagating
                                                  ravine salamander, ravine salamander).                     (171) Triturus carnifex (Italian crested            purposes, but no such amphibians or
                                                     (135) Plethodon savannah (Savannah                   newt).                                                 any progeny or eggs thereof may be
                                                  slimy salamander).                                         (172) Triturus cristatus (great crested             released into the wild except by the
                                                     (136) Plethodon sequoyah (Sequoyah                   newt).                                                 State wildlife conservation agency
                                                  slimy salamander).                                         (173) Triturus dobrogicus (Danube                   having jurisdiction over the area of
                                                     (137) Plethodon serratus (southern                   crested newt).                                         release or by persons having prior
                                                  red-backed salamander).                                    (174) Triturus hongkongensis (no                    written permission for release from such
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                     (138) Plethodon shenandoah                           common name)                                           agency.
                                                  (Shenandoah salamander).                                   (175) Triturus ivanbureschi (Balkan-
                                                     (139) Plethodon sherando (Big Levels                 Anatolian crested newt, Buresch’s                        Dated: December 30, 2015.
                                                  salamander).                                            crested newt).                                         Michael J. Bean,
                                                     (140) Plethodon shermani (red-legged                    (176) Triturus karelinii (Southern                  Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish
                                                  salamander).                                            crested newt).                                         and Wildlife and Parks.
                                                     (141) Plethodon stormi (Siskiyou                        (177) Triturus macedonicus (no                      [FR Doc. 2016–00452 Filed 1–12–16; 8:45 am]
                                                  Mountains salamander).                                  common name).                                          BILLING CODE 4333–15–P




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Document Created: 2016-01-13 01:00:53
Document Modified: 2016-01-13 01:00:53
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionInterim rule; request for comments; notice of availability of economic analysis.
DatesThis interim rule is effective as of January 28, 2016. Interested persons are invited to submit written comments on this interim rule on or before March 14, 2016
ContactJason Goldberg or Susan Jewell, Injurious Wildlife Listing Coordinators, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Branch of Aquatic Invasive Species; MS: FAC; 5275 Leesburg Pike; Falls Church, VA 22041-3803 telephone 703-358-1715. If you use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD), please call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 800-877-8339.
FR Citation81 FR 1534 
RIN Number1018-BA77
CFR AssociatedFish; Imports; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements; Transportation and Wildlife

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