81_FR_18844 81 FR 18781 - Migratory Bird Subsistence Harvest in Alaska; Harvest Regulations for Migratory Birds in Alaska During the 2016 Season

81 FR 18781 - Migratory Bird Subsistence Harvest in Alaska; Harvest Regulations for Migratory Birds in Alaska During the 2016 Season

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 63 (April 1, 2016)

Page Range18781-18788
FR Document2016-07398

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service or we) is establishing migratory bird subsistence harvest regulations in Alaska for the 2016 season. These regulations allow for the continuation of customary and traditional subsistence uses of migratory birds in Alaska and prescribe regional information on when and where the harvesting of birds may occur. These regulations were developed under a co-management process involving the Service, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, and Alaska Native representatives. The rulemaking is necessary because the regulations governing the subsistence harvest of migratory birds in Alaska are subject to annual review. This rulemaking establishes region-specific regulations that will go into effect on April 2, 2016, and expire on August 31, 2016.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 63 (Friday, April 1, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 63 (Friday, April 1, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 18781-18788]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-07398]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Fish and Wildlife Service

50 CFR Part 92

[Docket No. FWS-R7-MB-2015-0158; FF09M21200-156-FXMB1231099BPP0]
RIN 1018-BB10


Migratory Bird Subsistence Harvest in Alaska; Harvest Regulations 
for Migratory Birds in Alaska During the 2016 Season

AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service or we) is 
establishing migratory bird subsistence harvest regulations in Alaska 
for the 2016 season. These regulations allow for the continuation of 
customary and traditional subsistence uses of migratory birds in Alaska 
and prescribe regional information on when and where the harvesting of 
birds may occur. These regulations were developed under a co-management 
process involving the Service, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, 
and Alaska Native representatives. The rulemaking is necessary because 
the regulations governing the subsistence harvest of migratory birds in 
Alaska are subject to annual review. This rulemaking establishes 
region-specific regulations that will go into effect on April 2, 2016, 
and expire on August 31, 2016.

DATES: The amendments to subpart D of 50 CFR part 92 are effective 
April 2, 2016, through August 31, 2016. The amendments to subparts A 
and C of 50 CFR part 92 are effective May 2, 2016.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Donna Dewhurst, U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service, 1011 E. Tudor Road, Mail Stop 201, Anchorage, AK 99503; (907) 
786-3499.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Why is this rulemaking necessary?

    This rulemaking is necessary because, by law, the migratory bird 
harvest

[[Page 18782]]

season is closed unless opened by the Secretary of the Interior, and 
the regulations governing subsistence harvest of migratory birds in 
Alaska are subject to public review and annual approval. This rule 
establishes regulations for the taking of migratory birds for 
subsistence uses in Alaska during the spring and summer of 2016. This 
rule also sets forth a list of migratory bird season openings and 
closures in Alaska by region.

How do I find the history of these regulations?

    Background information, including past events leading to this 
rulemaking, accomplishments since the Migratory Bird Treaties with 
Canada and Mexico were amended, and a history, were originally 
addressed in the Federal Register on August 16, 2002 (67 FR 53511) and 
most recently on February 23, 2015 (80 FR 9392).
    Recent Federal Register documents and all final rules setting forth 
the annual harvest regulations are available at http://www.fws.gov/alaska/ambcc/regulations.htm or by contacting the person listed under 
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.

What is the process for issuing regulations for the subsistence harvest 
of migratory birds in Alaska?

    The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service or we) is establishing 
migratory bird subsistence harvest regulations in Alaska for the 2016 
season. These regulations allow for the continuation of customary and 
traditional subsistence uses of migratory birds in Alaska and prescribe 
regional information on when and where the harvesting of birds may 
occur. These regulations were developed under a co-management process 
involving the Service, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, and 
Alaska Native representatives.
    We opened the process to establish regulations for the 2016 spring 
and summer subsistence harvest of migratory birds in Alaska in a 
proposed rule published in the Federal Register on April 13, 2015 (80 
FR 19852), to amend 50 CFR part 20. While that proposed rule primarily 
addressed the regulatory process for hunting migratory birds for all 
purposes throughout the United States, we also discussed the background 
and history of Alaska subsistence regulations, explained the annual 
process for their establishment, and requested proposals for the 2016 
season. The rulemaking processes for both types of migratory bird 
harvest are related, and the April 13, 2015, proposed rule explained 
the connection between the two.
    The Alaska Migratory Bird Co-management Council (Co-management 
Council) held meetings on April 8-9, 2015, to develop recommendations 
for changes that would take effect during the 2016 harvest season. The 
Co-management Council also amended the consent agenda package of carry-
over regulations to request a limited emperor goose harvest for 2016; 
these recommended changes were presented first to the Pacific Flyway 
Council and then to the Service Regulations Committee (SRC) for 
approval at the committee's meeting on July 31, 2015.
    On December 17, 2015, we published in the Federal Register a 
proposed rule (80 FR 78950) to amend 50 CFR part 92 to establish 
regulations for the 2016 spring and summer subsistence harvest of 
migratory birds in Alaska at subpart D, and to make certain changes to 
the permanent regulations at subparts A and C.

Who is eligible to hunt under these regulations?

    Eligibility to harvest under the regulations established in 2003 
was limited to permanent residents, regardless of race, in villages 
located within the Alaska Peninsula, Kodiak Archipelago, the Aleutian 
Islands, and in areas north and west of the Alaska Range (50 CFR 92.5). 
These geographical restrictions opened the initial migratory bird 
subsistence harvest to about 13 percent of Alaska residents. High-
populated, roaded areas such as Anchorage, the Matanuska-Susitna and 
Fairbanks North Star boroughs, the Kenai Peninsula roaded area, the 
Gulf of Alaska roaded area, and Southeast Alaska were excluded from 
eligible subsistence harvest areas.
    Based on petitions requesting inclusion in the harvest in 2004, we 
added 13 additional communities based on criteria set forth in 50 CFR 
92.5(c). These communities were Gulkana, Gakona, Tazlina, Copper 
Center, Mentasta Lake, Chitina, Chistochina, Tatitlek, Chenega, Port 
Graham, Nanwalek, Tyonek, and Hoonah, with a combined population of 
2,766. In 2005, we added three additional communities for glaucous-
winged gull egg gathering only, based on petitions requesting 
inclusion. These southeastern communities were Craig, Hydaburg, and 
Yakutat, with a combined population of 2,459, based on the latest 
census information at that time.
    In 2007, we enacted the Alaska Department of Fish and Game's 
request to expand the Fairbanks North Star Borough excluded area to 
include the Central Interior area. This action excluded the following 
communities from participation in this harvest: Big Delta/Fort Greely, 
Healy, McKinley Park/Village, and Ferry, with a combined population of 
2,812.
    In 2012, we received a request from the Native Village of Eyak to 
include Cordova, Alaska, for a limited season that would legalize the 
traditional gathering of gull eggs and the hunting of waterfowl during 
spring. This request resulted in a new, limited harvest of spring 
waterfowl and gull eggs starting in 2014.

What is different in the regulations for 2016?

Subpart A

    Under subpart A, General Provisions, we are amending Sec.  92.4 by 
adding a new definition for ``Edible meat'' and revising the definition 
for ``Nonwasteful taking.'' These changes were requested in 2014, by 
the Bristol Bay Regional Council, which recommended that all edible 
parts of migratory waterfowl must be salvaged when harvested. The topic 
was originally brought up by the Association of Village Council 
Presidents after an incident in their region where tundra swans were 
only breasted and the remainder of the bird was discarded. The concern 
was that ``indigenous inhabitants'' harvesters come from a variety of 
different cultures, and it was expressed that subsistence should 
involve retaining the whole bird for food and other uses.

Subpart C

    Under subpart C, General Regulations Governing Subsistence Harvest, 
we are amending Sec.  92.22, the list of birds open to subsistence 
harvest, by updating scientific names for six species and clarifying 
the nomenclature for Canada goose subspecies. These nomenclature 
updates come from the Service and the Alaska Department of Fish and 
Game.

Subpart D

    The regulations we are establishing for subpart D, Annual 
Regulations Governing Subsistence Harvest, are the same as the 2015 
regulations. While we are not establishing any changes to the 2015 
regulations for subpart D in this 2016 rule, we provide information 
below on potential changes to the regulations for this subpart in the 
2017 migratory bird subsistence harvest regulations in Alaska.
    The Co-management Council proposed a new emperor goose (Chen 
canagica) limited subsistence hunt for the 2016 season. Since 2012, the 
Co-management Council has received regulatory proposals from the Sun'aq 
Tribe of Kodiak, the Kodiak-Aleutians

[[Page 18783]]

Subsistence Regional Advisory Council, the Yaquillrit Keutisti Council 
(Bristol Bay), and the Bering Strait/Norton Sound Migratory Bird 
Council (Kawerak) to open the harvest of emperor geese for the 
subsistence season. Since the hunting season has been closed since 1987 
for emperor geese, the Co-management Council created a subcommittee to 
address these proposals. The emperor goose harvest is guided by the 
2006 Pacific Flyway Management Plan and the 2005-2006 Yukon-Kuskokwim 
Delta Goose Management Plan. Over 95 percent of the emperor goose 
population breeds on the Yukon-Kuskowim Delta of Alaska, and most 
emperor geese winter in remote western Alaska with the remainder 
wintering in Russia. The Pacific Flyway Council recognizes the 3-year 
average abundance estimate derived from the emperor goose spring 
population survey on the Alaska Peninsula as the management index to 
guide harvest management decisions. The Pacific Flyway Council's 
Emperor Goose Management Plan and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta Goose 
Management Plan indicate that a harvest can be considered when the 3-
year average abundance index is at least 80,000 birds. This threshold 
has not been reached since 1984, and Alaska Natives have questioned the 
survey methods used to determine the population index.
    In addition, two studies are being conducted concurrently by the 
Service and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. The first study is 
designed to provide a comprehensive evaluation of all available emperor 
goose survey data and assess harvest potential of the population. The 
second study is designed to develop a Bayesian state space population 
model to improve estimates of population size by integrating current 
population assessment methods using all available data sets. The model 
provides a framework from which to make inferences about survival 
rates, age structure, and population size. The results of these studies 
will assist in amending the management plans.
    The Service conducted the spring emperor goose survey April 25-28, 
2015, and results indicated that the 2015 spring index (98,155) was 23 
percent above the 2014 count (79,883), and 49 percent higher than the 
long-term (1981-2014) average (65,923). The most recent 3-year average 
count (2012, 2014, 2015) is 81,875 geese and the highest on record 
since 1984. Further, it is above the threshold for consideration of an 
open hunting season on emperor geese as specified in the Yukon-
Kuskokwim Delta Goose Management Plan and the Pacific Flyway Council 
Management Plan for emperor geese.
    As a result of this new information, the Co-management Council 
amended their motion of the consent agenda to add an allowance for a 
limited emperor goose harvest in 2016. The Pacific Flyway Council met 
in July 2015, and supported the Co-management Council's recommendation 
to work with the State of Alaska and the Service to develop harvest 
regulations and monitoring for a limited emperor goose harvest in 2016. 
On July 31, 2015, the SRC supported the Co-management Council's 
proposed limited harvest of emperor geese for the 2016 Alaska spring 
and summer subsistence season. However, the approval was provisional 
based upon the following:
    (1) A limited harvest of 3,500 emperor geese to ensure that 
population growth continues toward the Flyway management plan 
objective;
    (2) A harvest allocation (e.g., an individual, family, or Village 
quota or permit hunt) that ensures harvest does not exceed 3,500;
    (3) Agreement on a monitoring program to index abundance of the 
emperor goose population; and
    (4) A revised Pacific Flyway Emperor Goose Management Plan, 
including harvest allocation among all parties (including spring/summer 
and fall/winter), population objective, population monitoring, and 
thresholds for season restriction or closure.
    The harvest allocation design and harvest monitoring plan are to be 
completed by November 1, 2016. Additionally, there was an explicit 
statement that the limited, legalized harvest of 3,500 birds was not in 
addition to existing subsistence harvest (approximately 3,200 emperor 
geese). The 3,500-bird allowable harvest is to be allocated to 
subsistence users during the spring and summer subsistence season. The 
SRC suggested that the allowable harvest should be monitored to ensure 
it does not exceed 3,500 birds.
    On August 13-14, and September 21, 2015, the Co-management Council 
Native Caucus met separately and with all partners to discuss options 
available to limit and monitor the harvest, as well as options to 
allocate the 3,500 birds across the six regions where emperor geese 
occur. Given the limited time provided to address the four conditions 
placed on this new harvest by the SRC, all partners agreed that the 
best course of action would be to spend additional time working 
together to develop a culturally sensitive framework tailored to each 
participating region that conserves the population and adequately 
addresses the data needs of all partners. In support of this 
recommendation, the Co-management Council took action to: Postpone an 
emperor goose harvest until 2017; work with all partners to develop the 
harvest framework; and work with their Emperor Goose Subcommittee and 
the Pacific Flyway Council on updating the Pacific Flyway Emperor Goose 
Management Plan.

How will the Service ensure that the subsistence harvest will not raise 
overall migratory bird harvest or threaten the conservation of 
endangered and threatened species?

    We have monitored subsistence harvest for the past 25 years through 
the use of household surveys in the most heavily used subsistence 
harvest areas, such as the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta. In recent years, more 
intensive surveys combined with outreach efforts focused on species 
identification have been added to improve the accuracy of information 
gathered from regions still reporting some subsistence harvest of 
listed or candidate species.

Spectacled and Steller's Eiders

    Spectacled eiders (Somateria fischeri) and the Alaska-breeding 
population of Steller's eiders (Polysticta stelleri) are listed as 
threatened species. Their migration and breeding distribution overlap 
with areas where the spring and summer subsistence migratory bird hunt 
is open in Alaska. Both species are closed to hunting, although harvest 
surveys and Service documentation indicate both species have been taken 
in several regions of Alaska.
    The Service has dual objectives and responsibilities for 
authorizing a subsistence harvest while protecting migratory birds and 
threatened species. Although these objectives continue to be 
challenging, they are not irreconcilable, provided that regulations 
continue to protect threatened species, measures to address documented 
threats are implemented, and the subsistence community and other 
conservation partners commit to working together. With these dual 
objectives in mind, the Service, working with North Slope partners, 
developed measures in 2009, to further reduce the potential for 
shooting mortality or injury of closed species. These conservation 
measures included: (1) Increased waterfowl hunter outreach and 
community awareness through partnering with the North Slope Migratory 
Bird Task Force; and (2) continued enforcement of the migratory bird 
regulations that are protective of listed eiders.
    This final rule continues to focus on the North Slope from Barrow 
to Point

[[Page 18784]]

Hope because Steller's eiders from the listed Alaska breeding 
population are known to breed and migrate there. These regulations are 
designed to address several ongoing eider management needs by 
clarifying for subsistence users that (1) Service law enforcement 
personnel have authority to verify species of birds possessed by 
hunters, and (2) it is illegal to possess any species of bird closed to 
harvest. This rule also describes how the Service's existing authority 
of emergency closure would be implemented, if necessary, to protect 
Steller's eiders. We are always willing to discuss regulations with our 
partners on the North Slope to ensure protection of closed species as 
well as provide subsistence hunters an opportunity to harvest migratory 
birds in a way that maintains the culture and traditional harvest of 
the community. The regulations pertaining to bag checks and possession 
of illegal birds are deemed necessary to monitor the number of closed 
eider species taken during the subsistence hunt.
    The Service is aware of and appreciates the considerable efforts by 
North Slope partners to raise awareness and educate hunters on 
Steller's eider conservation via the bird fair, meetings, radio shows, 
signs, school visits, and one-on-one contacts. We also recognize that 
no listed eiders have been documented shot from 2009 through 2012; 
however, one Steller's eider and one spectacled eider were found shot 
during the summer of 2013, and one Steller's eider was found shot in 
2014. In 2015, one spectacled eider was found dead, and it appeared to 
have been shot by a hunter. The Service acknowledges progress made with 
the other eider conservation measures, including partnering with the 
North Slope Migratory Bird Task Force, for increased waterfowl hunter 
awareness, continued enforcement of the regulations, and in-season 
verification of the harvest. To reduce the threat of shooting mortality 
of threatened eiders, we continue to work with North Slope partners to 
conduct education and outreach. In addition, the emergency closure 
authority provides another level of assurance if an unexpected number 
of Steller's eiders are killed by shooting (50 CFR 92.21 and 50 CFR 
92.32).
    In-season harvest monitoring information will be used to evaluate 
the efficacy of regulations, conservation measures, and outreach 
efforts. Conservation measures are being continued by the Service, with 
the amount of effort and emphasis being based on regulatory adherence.
    The longstanding general emergency closure provision at 50 CFR 
92.21 specifies that the harvest may be closed or temporarily suspended 
upon finding that a continuation of the regulation allowing the harvest 
would pose an imminent threat to the conservation of any migratory bird 
population. With regard to Steller's eiders, the regulations at 50 CFR 
92.32, carried over from the past 5 years, clarify that we will take 
action under 50 CFR 92.21 as is necessary to prevent further take of 
Steller's eiders, and that action could include temporary or long-term 
closures of the harvest in all or a portion of the geographic area open 
to harvest. When and if mortality of threatened eiders is documented, 
we will evaluate each mortality event by criteria such as cause, 
quantity, sex, age, location, and date. We will consult with the Co-
management Council when we are considering an emergency closure. If we 
determine that an emergency closure is necessary, we will design it to 
minimize its impact on the subsistence harvest.

Endangered Species Act Consideration

    Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act (16 U.S.C. 1536) requires 
the Secretary of the Interior to ``review other programs administered 
by him and utilize such programs in furtherance of the purposes of the 
Act'' and to ``insure that any action authorized, funded, or carried 
out * * * is not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of any 
endangered species or threatened species or result in the destruction 
or adverse modification of [critical] habitat. * * *'' We conducted an 
intra-agency consultation with the Service's Fairbanks Fish and 
Wildlife Field Office on this harvest as it will be managed in 
accordance with this final rule and the conservation measures. The 
consultation was completed with a biological opinion dated December 18, 
2015, that concluded the final rule and conservation measures are not 
likely to jeopardize the continued existence of Steller's and 
spectacled eiders or result in the destruction or adverse modification 
of designated critical habitat.

Summary of Public Involvement

    On December 17, 2015, we published in the Federal Register a 
proposed rule (80 FR 78950) to establish spring and summer migratory 
bird subsistence harvest regulations in Alaska for the 2016 subsistence 
season. The proposed rule provided for a public comment period of 60 
days, ending February 16, 2016. We posted an announcement of the 
comment period dates for the proposed rule, as well as the rule itself 
and related historical documents, on the Co-management Council's 
Internet homepage. We issued a press release announcing our request for 
public comments and the pertinent deadlines for such comments, which 
was faxed to the media Statewide in Alaska. Additionally, all documents 
were available on http://www.regulations.gov. The Service received two 
responses from the public.

Response to Public Comments

    Comment: We received one comment on the overall regulations that 
expressed strong opposition to the concept of allowing any harvest of 
migratory birds in Alaska.
    Service Response: For centuries, indigenous inhabitants of Alaska 
have harvested migratory birds for subsistence purposes during the 
spring and summer months. The Canada and Mexico migratory bird treaties 
were amended for the express purpose of allowing subsistence hunting 
for migratory birds during the spring and summer. The amendments 
indicate that the Service should issue regulations allowing such 
hunting as provided in the Migratory Bird Treaty Act; see 16 U.S.C. 
712(1). Please refer to Statutory Authority section, below, for more 
details.
    Comment: We received one comment encouraging the use of steel shot 
in rural Alaska.
    Service Response: These subsistence regulations have prohibited the 
possession and use of non-toxic shot since the program's inception in 
2003. This has been a target of both outreach and enforcement through 
the years.
    Comment: We received one comment requesting the reinstatement of a 
mandatory Federal Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp (``Duck 
Stamp'') for hunters over 12 or 16 years of age.
    Service Response: On December 18, 2014, President Obama signed into 
law the Federal Duck Stamp Act of 2014 (Pub. L. 113-264). The Federal 
Duck Stamp Act of 2014 amends the Migratory Bird Hunting and 
Conservation Stamp Act (16 U.S.C. 718a-718k, as amended) by, among 
other things, adding an exemption from the requirement to purchase a 
Duck Stamp for rural Alaska subsistence users. Specifically, the 
Federal Duck Stamp Act of 2014 states that purchase of a Duck Stamp is 
not required ``by a rural Alaska resident for subsistence uses (as that 
term is defined in section 803 of the Alaska National Interest Lands 
Conservation Act [ANILCA] (16 U.S.C. 3113)).'' ANILCA (Pub. L. 96-487, 
94 Stat. 2371) is codified, as

[[Page 18785]]

amended, at 16 U.S.C. 410hh-3233 and 43 U.S.C. 1602-1784. To remove 
this exemption would require another congressional action.
    Comment: We received one comment encouraging more hunter education 
classes in rural areas.
    Service Response: Hunter education classes are coordinated and 
conducted by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
    Comment: We received one comment saying we should encourage proper 
cooking and cleaning procedures and storage of harvested birds.
    Service Response: The annual public regulations booklet for the 
subsistence spring/summer migratory bird harvest has a special section 
on the last page dedicated to just these topics.
    Comment: We received one comment saying we should attempt to 
minimize use of trail vehicles and motorized equipment during the 
nesting season.
    Service Response: Access to nesting areas is dictated by the local 
land owner or manager. In the case of national wildlife refuges, 
contact the appropriate Service refuge office directly to discuss 
access issues.
    Comment: We received one comment saying that local populations of 
sea ducks as well as geese should be more protected.
    Service Response: Following declines from the 1960s to the 1980s, 
most sea duck and other waterfowl populations have stabilized. For 
example, the 2015 Environmental Assessment found that common eiders 
have increased since the mid-1990s, while king eiders have stabilized 
since 1996. Factors driving population fluctuations in sea duck 
populations are uncertain, but there is some evidence that sea ducks 
are responding to large scale changes in the marine environment. 
Harvested goose populations are all generally high or over management 
objectives. Total annual and long-term subsistence and sport harvest of 
waterfowl in Alaska and the Pacific Flyway are low relative to the size 
of their continental populations. In general, we do not set regulations 
to address waterfowl populations on a local scale because sport and 
subsistence harvest estimates and estimates of species abundance are 
very imprecise at local scales. We set subsistence harvest regulations 
on a regional or statewide level based on species or subspecies 
continental population status. We would welcome any suggestions on how 
to make our regulations more effective in conserving local populations 
of hunted birds.

Statutory Authority

    We derive our authority to issue these regulations from the 
Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, at 16 U.S.C. 712(1), which 
authorizes the Secretary of the Interior, in accordance with the 
treaties with Canada, Mexico, Japan, and Russia, to ``issue such 
regulations as may be necessary to assure that the taking of migratory 
birds and the collection of their eggs, by the indigenous inhabitants 
of the State of Alaska, shall be permitted for their own nutritional 
and other essential needs, as determined by the Secretary of the 
Interior, during seasons established so as to provide for the 
preservation and maintenance of stocks of migratory birds.''

Effective Date of This Rule

    The amendments to subpart D of 50 CFR part 92 will take effect less 
than 30 days after publication (see DATES, above). If there was a delay 
in the effective date of these regulations after this final rulemaking, 
subsistence hunters would not be able to take full advantage of their 
subsistence hunting opportunities. We therefore find that ``good 
cause'' exists justifying the earlier start date, within the terms of 5 
U.S.C. 553(d)(3) of the Administrative Procedure Act, and under 
authority of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (July 3, 1918), as amended 
(16 U.S.C. 703-712).

Required Determinations

Regulatory Planning and Review (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)

    Executive Order 12866 provides that the Office of Information and 
Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) will review all significant rules. The OIRA 
has determined that this rule is not significant.
    Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the principles of E.O. 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 and freedom of choice for 
the public where these approaches are relevant, feasible, and 
consistent with regulatory objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes further 
that regulations must be based on the best available science and that 
the rulemaking process must allow for public participation and an open 
exchange of ideas. We have developed this rule in a manner consistent 
with these requirements.

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Department of the Interior certifies that, if adopted, this 
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities as defined under the Regulatory Flexibility 
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). A regulatory flexibility analysis is not 
required. Accordingly, a Small Entity Compliance Guide is not required. 
This final rule would legalize a pre-existing subsistence activity, and 
the resources harvested will be consumed.

Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act

    This rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small 
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. This rule:
    (a) Will not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million 
or more. It legalizes and regulates a traditional subsistence activity. 
It will not result in a substantial increase in subsistence harvest or 
a significant change in harvesting patterns. The commodities that will 
be regulated under this final rule are migratory birds. This rule deals 
with legalizing the subsistence harvest of migratory birds and, as 
such, does not involve commodities traded in the marketplace. A small 
economic benefit from this final rule will derive from the sale of 
equipment and ammunition to carry out subsistence hunting. Most, if not 
all, businesses that sell hunting equipment in rural Alaska qualify as 
small businesses. We have no reason to believe that this final rule 
will lead to a disproportionate distribution of benefits.
    (b) Will not cause a major increase in costs or prices for 
consumers; individual industries; Federal, State, or local government 
agencies; or geographic regions. This final rule does not deal with 
traded commodities and, therefore, does not have an impact on prices 
for consumers.
    (c) Will not have significant adverse effects on competition, 
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of 
U.S.-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises. This 
final rule deals with the harvesting of wildlife for personal 
consumption. It does not regulate the marketplace in any way to 
generate substantial effects on the economy or the ability of 
businesses to compete.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    We have determined and certified under the Unfunded Mandates Reform 
Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) that this final rule will not impose a cost 
of $100 million or more in any given year on

[[Page 18786]]

local, State, or tribal governments or private entities. The final rule 
does 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 is not 
required. Participation on regional management bodies and the Co-
management Council requires travel expenses for some Alaska Native 
organizations and local governments. In addition, they assume some 
expenses related to coordinating involvement of village councils in the 
regulatory process. Total coordination and travel expenses for all 
Alaska Native organizations are estimated to be less than $300,000 per 
year. In a notice of decision (65 FR 16405; March 28, 2000), we 
identified 7 to 12 partner organizations (Alaska Native nonprofits and 
local governments) to administer the regional programs. The Alaska 
Department of Fish and Game also incurs expenses for travel to Co-
management Council and regional management body meetings. In addition, 
the State of Alaska will be required to provide technical staff support 
to each of the regional management bodies and to the Co-management 
Council. Expenses for the State's involvement may exceed $100,000 per 
year, but should not exceed $150,000 per year. When funding permits, we 
make annual grant agreements available to the partner organizations and 
the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to help offset their expenses.

Takings (Executive Order 12630)

    Under the criteria in Executive Order 12630, this final rule will 
not have significant takings implications. This final rule is not 
specific to particular land ownership, but applies to the harvesting of 
migratory bird resources throughout Alaska. A takings implication 
assessment is not required.

Federalism (Executive Order 13132)

    Under the criteria in Executive Order 13132, this final rule does 
not have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation 
of a federalism summary impact statement. We discuss effects of this 
final rule on the State of Alaska in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act 
section, above. We worked with the State of Alaska to develop these 
final regulations. Therefore, a federalism summary impact statement is 
not required.

Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order 12988)

    The Department, in promulgating this final rule, has determined 
that it will not unduly burden the judicial system and that it meets 
the requirements of sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988.

Government-to-Government Relations With Native American Tribal 
Governments

    Consistent with Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249; November 6, 
2000), ``Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal 
Governments'', and Department of Interior policy on Consultation with 
Indian Tribes (December 1, 2011), in January 2016, we sent letters via 
electronic mail to all 229 Alaska Federally recognized Indian tribes. 
Consistent with Congressional direction (Pub. L. 108-199, div. H, Sec. 
161, Jan. 23, 2004, 118 Stat. 452, as amended by Pub. L. 108-447, div. 
H, title V, Sec. 518, Dec. 8, 2004, 118 Stat. 3267), we also sent 
letters to approximately 200 Alaska Native corporations and other 
tribal entities in Alaska soliciting their input as to whether or not 
they would like the Service to consult with them on the 2016 migratory 
bird subsistence harvest regulations. We received one response that 
requested consultation. We conducted one consultation with a Native 
Traditional Council on February 16, 2016. The tribal contacts were 
happy with the information provided and did not have any specific 
comments on the regulations.
    We implemented the amended treaty with Canada with a focus on local 
involvement. The treaty calls for the creation of management bodies to 
ensure an effective and meaningful role for Alaska's indigenous 
inhabitants in the conservation of migratory birds. According to the 
Letter of Submittal, management bodies are to include Alaska Native, 
Federal, and State of Alaska representatives as equals. They develop 
recommendations for, among other things: Seasons and bag limits, 
methods and means of take, law enforcement policies, population and 
harvest monitoring, education programs, research and use of traditional 
knowledge, and habitat protection. The management bodies involve 
village councils to the maximum extent possible in all aspects of 
management. To ensure maximum input at the village level, we required 
each of the 11 participating regions to create regional management 
bodies consisting of at least one representative from the participating 
villages. The regional management bodies meet twice annually to review 
and/or submit proposals to the Statewide body.

Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)

    This final rule does not contain any new collections of information 
that require Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approval under the 
PRA (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). 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. OMB has reviewed and 
approved our collection of information associated with:
     Voluntary annual household surveys that we use to 
determine levels of subsistence take (OMB Control Number 1018-0124, 
expires June 30, 2016).
     Permits associated with subsistence hunting (OMB Control 
Number 1018-0075, expires April 30, 2016).

National Environmental Policy Act Consideration (42 U.S.C. 4321 et 
seq.)

    The annual regulations and options are considered in an October 
2016 environmental assessment, ``Managing Migratory Bird Subsistence 
Hunting in Alaska: Hunting Regulations for the 2016 Spring/Summer 
Harvest,'' dated October 9, 2015. Copies are available from the person 
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT or at http://www.regulations.gov.

Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use (Executive Order 13211)

    Executive Order 13211 requires agencies to prepare Statements of 
Energy Effects when undertaking certain actions. This is not a 
significant regulatory action under this Executive Order; it would 
allow only for traditional subsistence harvest and improve conservation 
of migratory birds by allowing effective regulation of this harvest. 
Further, this final rule is not expected to significantly affect energy 
supplies, distribution, or use. Therefore, this action is not a 
significant energy action under Executive Order 13211, and a Statement 
of Energy Effects is not required.

List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 92

    Hunting, Treaties, Wildlife.

Regulation Promulgation

    For the reasons set out in the preamble, we amend title 50, chapter 
I, subchapter G, of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:

[[Page 18787]]

PART 92--MIGRATORY BIRD SUBSISTENCE HARVEST IN ALASKA

0
1. The authority citation for part 92 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  16 U.S.C. 703-712.

Subpart A--General Provisions

0
2. Amend Sec.  92.4 by adding, in alphabetical order, a definition for 
``Edible meat'' and revising the definition for ``Nonwasteful taking'' 
to read as follows:


Sec.  92.4  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Edible meat means the meat from the breast, back, thighs, legs, 
wings, gizzard, and heart. The head, neck, feet, other internal organs, 
and skin are considered inedible byproducts, and not edible meat, for 
all provisions of this part.
* * * * *
    Nonwasteful taking means making a reasonable effort to retrieve all 
birds killed or wounded, and retaining all edible meat until the birds 
have been transported to the location where they will be consumed, 
processed, or preserved as human food.
* * * * *

Subpart C--General Regulations Governing Subsistence Harvest

0
3. Amend Sec.  92.22 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a)(3);
0
b. Removing and reserving paragraph (a)(4); and
0
c. Revising paragraphs (a)(5) and (6), (i)(3), (13), and (15), (j)(4) 
and (15), and (l)(2).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  92.22  Subsistence migratory bird species.

* * * * *
    (a) * * *
    (3) Canada goose (Branta canadensis).
* * * * *
    (5) Canada goose, subspecies Aleutian goose--except in the Semidi 
Islands.
    (6) Canada goose, subspecies cackling goose--except no egg 
gathering is permitted.
* * * * *
    (i) * * *
    (3) Spotted sandpiper (Actitis macularius).
* * * * *
    (13) Wilson's snipe (Gallinago delicata).
* * * * *
    (15) Red phalarope (Phalaropus fulicarius).
* * * * *
    (j) * * *
    (4) Bonaparte's gull (Chroicocephalus philadelphia).
* * * * *
    (15) Aleutian tern (Onychoprion aleuticus).
* * * * *
    (l) * * *
    (2) Snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus).

Subpart D--Annual Regulations Governing Subsistence Harvest

0
4. Amend subpart D by adding Sec.  92.31 to read as follows:


Sec.  92.31  Region-specific regulations.

    The 2016 season dates for the eligible subsistence harvest areas 
are as follows:
    (a) Aleutian/Pribilof Islands Region. (1) Northern Unit (Pribilof 
Islands):
    (i) Season: April 2-June 30.
    (ii) Closure: July 1-August 31.
    (2) Central Unit (Aleutian Region's eastern boundary on the Alaska 
Peninsula westward to and including Unalaska Island):
    (i) Season: April 2-June 15 and July 16-August 31.
    (ii) Closure: June 16-July 15.
    (iii) Special Black Brant Season Closure: August 16-August 31, only 
in Izembek and Moffet lagoons.
    (iv) Special Tundra Swan Closure: All hunting and egg gathering 
closed in Game Management Units 9(D) and 10.
    (3) Western Unit (Umnak Island west to and including Attu Island):
    (i) Season: April 2-July 15 and August 16-August 31.
    (ii) Closure: July 16-August 15.
    (b) Yukon/Kuskokwim Delta Region. (1) Season: April 2-August 31.
    (2) Closure: 30-day closure dates to be announced by the Service's 
Alaska Regional Director or his designee, after consultation with field 
biologists and the Association of Village Council President's Waterfowl 
Conservation Committee. This 30-day period will occur between June 1 
and August 15 of each year. A press release announcing the actual 
closure dates will be forwarded to regional newspapers and radio and 
television stations.
    (3) Special Black Brant and Cackling Goose Season Hunting Closure: 
From the period when egg laying begins until young birds are fledged. 
Closure dates to be announced by the Service's Alaska Regional Director 
or his designee, after consultation with field biologists and the 
Association of Village Council President's Waterfowl Conservation 
Committee. A press release announcing the actual closure dates will be 
forwarded to regional newspapers and radio and television stations.
    (c) Bristol Bay Region. (1) Season: April 2-June 14 and July 16-
August 31 (general season); April 2-July 15 for seabird egg gathering 
only.
    (2) Closure: June 15-July 15 (general season); July 16-August 31 
(seabird egg gathering).
    (d) Bering Strait/Norton Sound Region. (1) Stebbins/St. Michael 
Area (Point Romanof to Canal Point):
    (i) Season: April 15-June 14 and July 16-August 31.
    (ii) Closure: June 15-July 15.
    (2) Remainder of the region:
    (i) Season: April 2-June 14 and July 16-August 31 for waterfowl; 
April 2-July 19 and August 21-August 31 for all other birds.
    (ii) Closure: June 15-July 15 for waterfowl; July 20-August 20 for 
all other birds.
    (e) Kodiak Archipelago Region, except for the Kodiak Island roaded 
area, which is closed to the harvesting of migratory birds and their 
eggs. The closed area consists of all lands and waters (including 
exposed tidelands) east of a line extending from Crag Point in the 
north to the west end of Saltery Cove in the south and all lands and 
water south of a line extending from Termination Point along the north 
side of Cascade Lake extending to Anton Larsen Bay. Marine waters 
adjacent to the closed area are closed to harvest within 500 feet from 
the water's edge. The offshore islands are open to harvest.
    (1) Season: April 2-June 30 and July 31-August 31 for seabirds; 
April 2-June 20 and July 22-August 31 for all other birds.
    (2) Closure: July 1-July 30 for seabirds; June 21-July 21 for all 
other birds.
    (f) Northwest Arctic Region. (1) Season: April 2-June 9 and August 
15-August 31 (hunting in general); waterfowl egg gathering May 20-June 
9 only; seabird egg gathering May 20-July 12 only; hunting molting/non-
nesting waterfowl July 1-July 31 only.
    (2) Closure: June 10-August 14, except for the taking of seabird 
eggs and molting/non-nesting waterfowl as provided in paragraph (f)(1) 
of this section.
    (g) North Slope Region. (1) Southern Unit (Southwestern North Slope 
regional boundary east to Peard Bay, everything west of the longitude 
line 158[deg]3' W. and south of the latitude line 70[deg]45' N. to the 
west bank of the Ikpikpuk River, and everything south of the latitude 
line 69[deg]45' N. between the west bank of the Ikpikpuk River to the 
east bank of Sagavinirktok River):
    (i) Season: April 2-June 29 and July 30-August 31 for seabirds; 
April 2-June 19 and July 20-August 31 for all other birds.

[[Page 18788]]

    (ii) Closure: June 30-July 29 for seabirds; June 20-July 19 for all 
other birds.
    (iii) Special Black Brant Hunting Opening: From June 20-July 5. The 
open area consists of the coastline, from mean high water line outward 
to include open water, from Nokotlek Point east to longitude line 
158[deg]30' W. This includes Peard Bay, Kugrua Bay, and Wainwright 
Inlet, but not the Kuk and Kugrua river drainages.
    (2) Northern Unit (At Peard Bay, everything east of the longitude 
line 158[deg]30' W. and north of the latitude line 70[deg]45' N. to 
west bank of the Ikpikpuk River, and everything north of the latitude 
line 69[deg]45' N. between the west bank of the Ikpikpuk River to the 
east bank of Sagavinirktok River):
    (i) Season: April 2-June 6 and July 7-August 31 for king and common 
eiders; April 2-June 15 and July 16-August 31 for all other birds.
    (ii) Closure: June 7-July 6 for king and common eiders; June 16-
July 15 for all other birds.
    (3) Eastern Unit (East of eastern bank of the Sagavanirktok River):
    (i) Season: April 2-June 19 and July 20-August 31.
    (ii) Closure: June 20-July 19.
    (4) All Units: Yellow-billed loons. Annually, up to 20 yellow-
billed loons total for the region inadvertently entangled in 
subsistence fishing nets in the North Slope Region may be kept for 
subsistence use.
    (5) North Coastal Zone (Cape Thompson north to Point Hope and east 
along the Arctic Ocean coastline around Point Barrow to Ross Point, 
including Iko Bay, and 5 miles inland).
    (i) No person may at any time, by any means, or in any manner, 
possess or have in custody any migratory bird or part thereof, taken in 
violation of subparts C and D of this part.
    (ii) Upon request from a Service law enforcement officer, hunters 
taking, attempting to take, or transporting migratory birds taken 
during the subsistence harvest season must present them to the officer 
for species identification.
    (h) Interior Region. (1) Season: April 2-June 14 and July 16-August 
31; egg gathering May 1-June 14 only.
    (2) Closure: June 15-July 15.
    (i) Upper Copper River Region (Harvest Area: Game Management Units 
11 and 13) (Eligible communities: Gulkana, Chitina, Tazlina, Copper 
Center, Gakona, Mentasta Lake, Chistochina and Cantwell).
    (1) Season: April 15-May 26 and June 27-August 31.
    (2) Closure: May 27-June 26.
    (3) The Copper River Basin communities listed above also documented 
traditional use harvesting birds in Game Management Unit 12, making 
them eligible to hunt in this unit using the seasons specified in 
paragraph (h) of this section.
    (j) Gulf of Alaska Region. (1) Prince William Sound Area West 
(Harvest area: Game Management Unit 6[D]), (Eligible Chugach 
communities: Chenega Bay, Tatitlek):
    (i) Season: April 2-May 31 and July 1-August 31.
    (ii) Closure: June 1-30.
    (2) Prince William Sound Area East (Harvest area: Game Management 
Units 6[B] and [C]--Barrier Islands between Strawberry Channel and 
Softtuk Bar), (Eligible Chugach communities: Cordova):
    (i) Season: April 2-April 30 (hunting); May 1-May 31 (gull egg 
gathering).
    (ii) Closure: May 1-August 31 (hunting); April 2-30 and June 1-
August 31 (gull egg gathering).
    (iii) Species Open for Hunting: Greater white-fronted goose; snow 
goose; gadwall; Eurasian and American wigeon; blue-winged and green-
winged teal; mallard; northern shoveler; northern pintail; canvasback; 
redhead; ring-necked duck; greater and lesser scaup; king and common 
eider; harlequin duck; surf, white-winged, and black scoter; long-
tailed duck; bufflehead; common and Barrow's goldeneye; hooded, common, 
and red-breasted merganser; and sandhill crane. Species open for egg 
gathering: glaucous-winged, herring, and mew gulls.
    (iv) Use of Boats/All-Terrain Vehicles: No hunting from motorized 
vehicles or any form of watercraft.
    (v) Special Registration: All hunters or egg gatherers must possess 
an annual permit, which is available from the Cordova offices of the 
Native Village of Eyak and the U.S. Forest Service.
    (3) Kachemak Bay Area (Harvest area: Game Management Unit 15[C] 
South of a line connecting the tip of Homer Spit to the mouth of Fox 
River) (Eligible Chugach Communities: Port Graham, Nanwalek):
    (i) Season: April 2-May 31 and July 1-August 31.
    (ii) Closure: June 1-30.
    (k) Cook Inlet (Harvest area: portions of Game Management Unit 
16[B] as specified below) (Eligible communities: Tyonek only):
    (1) Season: April 2-May 31--That portion of Game Management Unit 
16(B) south of the Skwentna River and west of the Yentna River, and 
August 1-31--That portion of Game Management Unit 16(B) south of the 
Beluga River, Beluga Lake, and the Triumvirate Glacier.
    (2) Closure: June 1-July 31.
    (l) Southeast Alaska. (1) Community of Hoonah (Harvest area: 
National Forest lands in Icy Strait and Cross Sound, including Middle 
Pass Rock near the Inian Islands, Table Rock in Cross Sound, and other 
traditional locations on the coast of Yakobi Island. The land and 
waters of Glacier Bay National Park remain closed to all subsistence 
harvesting (50 CFR part 100.3(a)):
    (i) Season: Glaucous-winged gull egg gathering only: May 15-June 
30.
    (ii) Closure: July 1-August 31.
    (2) Communities of Craig and Hydaburg (Harvest area: Small islands 
and adjacent shoreline of western Prince of Wales Island from Point 
Baker to Cape Chacon, but also including Coronation and Warren 
islands):
    (i) Season: Glaucous-winged gull egg gathering only: May 15-June 
30.
    (ii) Closure: July 1-August 31.
    (3) Community of Yakutat (Harvest area: Icy Bay (Icy Cape to Point 
Riou), and coastal lands and islands bordering the Gulf of Alaska from 
Point Manby southeast to and including Dry Bay):
    (i) Season: glaucous-winged gull egg gathering: May 15-June 30.
    (ii) Closure: July 1-August 31.

0
5. Amend subpart D by adding Sec.  92.32 to read as follows:


Sec.  92.32  Emergency regulations to protect Steller's eiders.

    Upon finding that continuation of these subsistence regulations 
would pose an imminent threat to the conservation of threatened 
Steller's eiders (Polysticta stelleri,) the U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service Alaska Regional Director, in consultation with the Co-
management Council, will immediately under Sec.  92.21 take action as 
is necessary to prevent further take. Regulation changes implemented 
could range from a temporary closure of duck hunting in a small 
geographic area to large-scale regional or Statewide long-term closures 
of all subsistence migratory bird hunting. These closures or temporary 
suspensions will remain in effect until the Regional Director, in 
consultation with the Co-management Council, determines that the 
potential for additional Steller's eiders to be taken no longer exists.

    Dated: March 21, 2016.
Karen Hyun,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. 2016-07398 Filed 3-31-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4333-15-P



                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 63 / Friday, April 1, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                              18781

                                           ‘‘California Regional Haze Plan,’’                         (2) The requirements of section                       (2) The requirements of section
                                           adopted January 22, 2009.                               110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) regarding interference            110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) regarding interference
                                              (e) 2008 Pb NAAQS: The 2011 Pb                       with any other state’s measures required              with other states’ measures to protect
                                           Infrastructure SIP, submitted on                        under title I, part C of the Clean Air Act            visibility are met by chapter 3
                                           September 22, 2011, and the 2014                        to prevent significant deterioration of air           (Emissions Inventory), chapter 4
                                           Multi-pollutant Infrastructure SIP,                     quality, except that these requirements               (California 2018 Progress Strategy), and
                                           submitted on March 6, 2014, and the                     are not fully met in the Air Pollution                chapter 8 (Consultation) of the
                                           additional plan elements listed below                   Control Districts (APCDs) or Air Quality              ‘‘California Regional Haze Plan,’’
                                           meet the following specific                             Management Districts (AQMDs) listed in                adopted January 22, 2009.
                                           requirements of Clean Air Act section                   this paragraph.                                       [FR Doc. 2016–07323 Filed 3–31–16; 8:45 am]
                                           110(a)(2)(D)(i) for the 2008 Pb NAAQS.                     (i) Mendocino County AQMD (PSD                     BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
                                              (1) The requirements of CAA section                  requirements for a baseline date for
                                           110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) regarding significant                PM2.5 increments, only)
                                           contribution to nonattainment of the                       (ii) North Coast APCD (PSD                         DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
                                           2008 Pb NAAQS in any other State and                    requirements for the regulation of PM2.5,
                                           interference with maintenance of the                    PM2.5 precursors, condensable PM2.5,                  Fish and Wildlife Service
                                           2008 Pb NAAQS by any other State.                       PM2.5 increments, and NOX as an ozone
                                              (2) The requirements of section                      precursor, only)                                      50 CFR Part 92
                                           110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) regarding interference                 (iii) Northern Sonoma County APCD
                                                                                                                                                         [Docket No. FWS–R7–MB–2015–0158;
                                           with any other state’s measures required                (PSD requirements for a baseline date                 FF09M21200–156–FXMB1231099BPP0]
                                           under title I, part C of the Clean Air Act              for PM2.5 increments, only)
                                           to prevent significant deterioration of air                (iv) South Coast AQMD (PSD                         RIN 1018–BB10
                                           quality, except that these requirements                 requirements for the NAAQS, only).
                                           are not fully met in the Air Pollution                     (v) All other areas in California that             Migratory Bird Subsistence Harvest in
                                           Control Districts (APCDs) or Air Quality                are subject to the Federal PSD program                Alaska; Harvest Regulations for
                                           Management Districts (AQMDs) listed in                  as provided in 40 CFR 52.270.                         Migratory Birds in Alaska During the
                                           this paragraph.                                            (3) The requirements of section                    2016 Season
                                              (i) Mendocino County AQMD (PSD                       110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) regarding interference            AGENCY:   Fish and Wildlife Service,
                                           requirements for a baseline date for                    with other states’ measures to protect                Interior.
                                           PM2.5 increments, only)                                 visibility are met by chapter 3                       ACTION: Final rule.
                                              (ii) North Coast APCD (PSD                           (Emissions Inventory), chapter 4
                                           requirements for the regulation of PM2.5,               (California 2018 Progress Strategy), and              SUMMARY:   The U.S. Fish and Wildlife
                                           PM2.5 precursors, condensable PM2.5,                    chapter 8 (Consultation) of the                       Service (Service or we) is establishing
                                           PM2.5 increments, and NOX as an ozone                   ‘‘California Regional Haze Plan,’’                    migratory bird subsistence harvest
                                           precursor, only)                                        adopted January 22, 2009.                             regulations in Alaska for the 2016
                                              (iii) Northern Sonoma County APCD                       (g) 2010 SO2 NAAQS: The 2014 Multi-                season. These regulations allow for the
                                           (PSD requirements for a baseline date                   pollutant Infrastructure SIP, submitted               continuation of customary and
                                           for PM2.5 increments, only)                             on March 6, 2014, and the additional                  traditional subsistence uses of migratory
                                              (iv) South Coast AQMD (PSD                           plan elements listed below meet the                   birds in Alaska and prescribe regional
                                           requirements for the NAAQS, only).                      following specific requirements of Clean              information on when and where the
                                              (v) All other areas in California that               Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) for the               harvesting of birds may occur. These
                                           are subject to the Federal PSD program                  2010 SO2 NAAQS.                                       regulations were developed under a co-
                                           as provided in 40 CFR 52.270.                              (1) The requirements of section                    management process involving the
                                              (3) The requirements of section                      110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) regarding interference            Service, the Alaska Department of Fish
                                           110(a)(2)(D)(i)(II) regarding interference              with any other state’s measures required              and Game, and Alaska Native
                                           with other states’ measures to protect                  under title I, part C of the Clean Air Act            representatives. The rulemaking is
                                           visibility are met by chapter 3                         to prevent significant deterioration of air           necessary because the regulations
                                           (Emissions Inventory), chapter 4                        quality, except that these requirements               governing the subsistence harvest of
                                           (California 2018 Progress Strategy), and                are not fully met in the Air Pollution                migratory birds in Alaska are subject to
                                           chapter 8 (Consultation) of the                         Control Districts (APCDs) or Air Quality              annual review. This rulemaking
                                           ‘‘California Regional Haze Plan,’’                      Management Districts (AQMDs) listed in                establishes region-specific regulations
                                           adopted January 22, 2009.                               this paragraph.                                       that will go into effect on April 2, 2016,
                                              (f) 2010 NO2 NAAQS: The 2012 NO2                        (i) Mendocino County AQMD (PSD                     and expire on August 31, 2016.
                                           Infrastructure SIP, submitted on                        requirements for a baseline date for                  DATES: The amendments to subpart D of
                                           November 15, 2012, and the 2014 Multi-                  PM2.5 increments, only)                               50 CFR part 92 are effective April 2,
                                           pollutant Infrastructure SIP, submitted                    (ii) North Coast APCD (PSD                         2016, through August 31, 2016. The
                                           on March 6, 2014, and the additional                    requirements for the regulation of PM2.5,             amendments to subparts A and C of 50
                                           plan elements listed below meet the                     PM2.5 precursors, condensable PM2.5,                  CFR part 92 are effective May 2, 2016.
                                           following specific requirements of Clean                PM2.5 increments, and NOX as an ozone                 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                           Air Act section 110(a)(2)(D)(i) for the                 precursor, only)                                      Donna Dewhurst, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
                                           2010 NO2 NAAQS.                                            (iii) Northern Sonoma County APCD                  Service, 1011 E. Tudor Road, Mail Stop
                                              (1) The requirements of CAA section                  (PSD requirements for a baseline date                 201, Anchorage, AK 99503; (907) 786–
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                           110(a)(2)(D)(i)(I) regarding significant                for PM2.5 increments, only)                           3499.
                                           contribution to nonattainment of the                       (iv) South Coast AQMD (PSD                         SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                           2010 NO2 NAAQS in any other State                       requirements for the NAAQS, only).
                                           and interference with maintenance of                       (v) All other areas in California that             Why is this rulemaking necessary?
                                           the 2010 NO2 NAAQS by any other                         are subject to the Federal PSD program                  This rulemaking is necessary because,
                                           State.                                                  as provided in 40 CFR 52.270.                         by law, the migratory bird harvest


                                      VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:14 Mar 31, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00041   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\01APR1.SGM   01APR1


                                           18782                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 63 / Friday, April 1, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           season is closed unless opened by the                      The Alaska Migratory Bird Co-                      from participation in this harvest: Big
                                           Secretary of the Interior, and the                      management Council (Co-management                     Delta/Fort Greely, Healy, McKinley
                                           regulations governing subsistence                       Council) held meetings on April 8–9,                  Park/Village, and Ferry, with a
                                           harvest of migratory birds in Alaska are                2015, to develop recommendations for                  combined population of 2,812.
                                           subject to public review and annual                     changes that would take effect during                    In 2012, we received a request from
                                           approval. This rule establishes                         the 2016 harvest season. The Co-                      the Native Village of Eyak to include
                                           regulations for the taking of migratory                 management Council also amended the                   Cordova, Alaska, for a limited season
                                           birds for subsistence uses in Alaska                    consent agenda package of carry-over                  that would legalize the traditional
                                           during the spring and summer of 2016.                   regulations to request a limited emperor              gathering of gull eggs and the hunting of
                                           This rule also sets forth a list of                     goose harvest for 2016; these                         waterfowl during spring. This request
                                           migratory bird season openings and                      recommended changes were presented                    resulted in a new, limited harvest of
                                           closures in Alaska by region.                           first to the Pacific Flyway Council and               spring waterfowl and gull eggs starting
                                                                                                   then to the Service Regulations                       in 2014.
                                           How do I find the history of these
                                                                                                   Committee (SRC) for approval at the
                                           regulations?                                                                                                  What is different in the regulations for
                                                                                                   committee’s meeting on July 31, 2015.
                                              Background information, including                       On December 17, 2015, we published                 2016?
                                           past events leading to this rulemaking,                 in the Federal Register a proposed rule               Subpart A
                                           accomplishments since the Migratory                     (80 FR 78950) to amend 50 CFR part 92
                                           Bird Treaties with Canada and Mexico                    to establish regulations for the 2016                    Under subpart A, General Provisions,
                                           were amended, and a history, were                       spring and summer subsistence harvest                 we are amending § 92.4 by adding a new
                                           originally addressed in the Federal                     of migratory birds in Alaska at subpart               definition for ‘‘Edible meat’’ and
                                           Register on August 16, 2002 (67 FR                      D, and to make certain changes to the                 revising the definition for ‘‘Nonwasteful
                                           53511) and most recently on February                    permanent regulations at subparts A and               taking.’’ These changes were requested
                                           23, 2015 (80 FR 9392).                                  C.                                                    in 2014, by the Bristol Bay Regional
                                              Recent Federal Register documents                                                                          Council, which recommended that all
                                           and all final rules setting forth the                   Who is eligible to hunt under these                   edible parts of migratory waterfowl
                                           annual harvest regulations are available                regulations?                                          must be salvaged when harvested. The
                                           at http://www.fws.gov/alaska/ambcc/                       Eligibility to harvest under the                    topic was originally brought up by the
                                           regulations.htm or by contacting the                    regulations established in 2003 was                   Association of Village Council
                                           person listed under FOR FURTHER                         limited to permanent residents,                       Presidents after an incident in their
                                           INFORMATION CONTACT.                                    regardless of race, in villages located               region where tundra swans were only
                                                                                                   within the Alaska Peninsula, Kodiak                   breasted and the remainder of the bird
                                           What is the process for issuing                                                                               was discarded. The concern was that
                                                                                                   Archipelago, the Aleutian Islands, and
                                           regulations for the subsistence harvest                                                                       ‘‘indigenous inhabitants’’ harvesters
                                                                                                   in areas north and west of the Alaska
                                           of migratory birds in Alaska?                                                                                 come from a variety of different
                                                                                                   Range (50 CFR 92.5). These geographical
                                             The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service                    restrictions opened the initial migratory             cultures, and it was expressed that
                                           (Service or we) is establishing migratory               bird subsistence harvest to about 13                  subsistence should involve retaining the
                                           bird subsistence harvest regulations in                 percent of Alaska residents. High-                    whole bird for food and other uses.
                                           Alaska for the 2016 season. These                       populated, roaded areas such as
                                           regulations allow for the continuation of                                                                     Subpart C
                                                                                                   Anchorage, the Matanuska-Susitna and
                                           customary and traditional subsistence                   Fairbanks North Star boroughs, the                      Under subpart C, General Regulations
                                           uses of migratory birds in Alaska and                   Kenai Peninsula roaded area, the Gulf of              Governing Subsistence Harvest, we are
                                           prescribe regional information on when                  Alaska roaded area, and Southeast                     amending § 92.22, the list of birds open
                                           and where the harvesting of birds may                   Alaska were excluded from eligible                    to subsistence harvest, by updating
                                           occur. These regulations were                           subsistence harvest areas.                            scientific names for six species and
                                           developed under a co-management                           Based on petitions requesting                       clarifying the nomenclature for Canada
                                           process involving the Service, the                      inclusion in the harvest in 2004, we                  goose subspecies. These nomenclature
                                           Alaska Department of Fish and Game,                     added 13 additional communities based                 updates come from the Service and the
                                           and Alaska Native representatives.                      on criteria set forth in 50 CFR 92.5(c).              Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
                                             We opened the process to establish                    These communities were Gulkana,
                                           regulations for the 2016 spring and                                                                           Subpart D
                                                                                                   Gakona, Tazlina, Copper Center,
                                           summer subsistence harvest of                           Mentasta Lake, Chitina, Chistochina,                    The regulations we are establishing
                                           migratory birds in Alaska in a proposed                 Tatitlek, Chenega, Port Graham,                       for subpart D, Annual Regulations
                                           rule published in the Federal Register                  Nanwalek, Tyonek, and Hoonah, with a                  Governing Subsistence Harvest, are the
                                           on April 13, 2015 (80 FR 19852), to                     combined population of 2,766. In 2005,                same as the 2015 regulations. While we
                                           amend 50 CFR part 20. While that                        we added three additional communities                 are not establishing any changes to the
                                           proposed rule primarily addressed the                   for glaucous-winged gull egg gathering                2015 regulations for subpart D in this
                                           regulatory process for hunting migratory                only, based on petitions requesting                   2016 rule, we provide information
                                           birds for all purposes throughout the                   inclusion. These southeastern                         below on potential changes to the
                                           United States, we also discussed the                    communities were Craig, Hydaburg, and                 regulations for this subpart in the 2017
                                           background and history of Alaska                        Yakutat, with a combined population of                migratory bird subsistence harvest
                                           subsistence regulations, explained the                  2,459, based on the latest census                     regulations in Alaska.
                                           annual process for their establishment,                 information at that time.                               The Co-management Council
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                                           and requested proposals for the 2016                      In 2007, we enacted the Alaska                      proposed a new emperor goose (Chen
                                           season. The rulemaking processes for                    Department of Fish and Game’s request                 canagica) limited subsistence hunt for
                                           both types of migratory bird harvest are                to expand the Fairbanks North Star                    the 2016 season. Since 2012, the Co-
                                           related, and the April 13, 2015,                        Borough excluded area to include the                  management Council has received
                                           proposed rule explained the connection                  Central Interior area. This action                    regulatory proposals from the Sun’aq
                                           between the two.                                        excluded the following communities                    Tribe of Kodiak, the Kodiak-Aleutians


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 63 / Friday, April 1, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                        18783

                                           Subsistence Regional Advisory Council,                  Plan and the Pacific Flyway Council                   all partners. In support of this
                                           the Yaquillrit Keutisti Council (Bristol                Management Plan for emperor geese.                    recommendation, the Co-management
                                           Bay), and the Bering Strait/Norton                         As a result of this new information,               Council took action to: Postpone an
                                           Sound Migratory Bird Council                            the Co-management Council amended                     emperor goose harvest until 2017; work
                                           (Kawerak) to open the harvest of                        their motion of the consent agenda to                 with all partners to develop the harvest
                                           emperor geese for the subsistence                       add an allowance for a limited emperor                framework; and work with their
                                           season. Since the hunting season has                    goose harvest in 2016. The Pacific                    Emperor Goose Subcommittee and the
                                           been closed since 1987 for emperor                      Flyway Council met in July 2015, and                  Pacific Flyway Council on updating the
                                           geese, the Co-management Council                        supported the Co-management Council’s                 Pacific Flyway Emperor Goose
                                           created a subcommittee to address these                 recommendation to work with the State                 Management Plan.
                                           proposals. The emperor goose harvest is                 of Alaska and the Service to develop
                                                                                                   harvest regulations and monitoring for a              How will the Service ensure that the
                                           guided by the 2006 Pacific Flyway
                                                                                                   limited emperor goose harvest in 2016.                subsistence harvest will not raise
                                           Management Plan and the 2005–2006
                                                                                                   On July 31, 2015, the SRC supported the               overall migratory bird harvest or
                                           Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta Goose
                                                                                                   Co-management Council’s proposed                      threaten the conservation of
                                           Management Plan. Over 95 percent of
                                                                                                   limited harvest of emperor geese for the              endangered and threatened species?
                                           the emperor goose population breeds on
                                           the Yukon-Kuskowim Delta of Alaska,                     2016 Alaska spring and summer                            We have monitored subsistence
                                           and most emperor geese winter in                        subsistence season. However, the                      harvest for the past 25 years through the
                                           remote western Alaska with the                          approval was provisional based upon                   use of household surveys in the most
                                           remainder wintering in Russia. The                      the following:                                        heavily used subsistence harvest areas,
                                           Pacific Flyway Council recognizes the 3-                   (1) A limited harvest of 3,500 emperor             such as the Yukon–Kuskokwim Delta. In
                                           year average abundance estimate                         geese to ensure that population growth                recent years, more intensive surveys
                                           derived from the emperor goose spring                   continues toward the Flyway                           combined with outreach efforts focused
                                           population survey on the Alaska                         management plan objective;                            on species identification have been
                                           Peninsula as the management index to                       (2) A harvest allocation (e.g., an                 added to improve the accuracy of
                                           guide harvest management decisions.                     individual, family, or Village quota or               information gathered from regions still
                                           The Pacific Flyway Council’s Emperor                    permit hunt) that ensures harvest does                reporting some subsistence harvest of
                                           Goose Management Plan and the Yukon-                    not exceed 3,500;                                     listed or candidate species.
                                           Kuskokwim Delta Goose Management                           (3) Agreement on a monitoring
                                                                                                   program to index abundance of the                     Spectacled and Steller’s Eiders
                                           Plan indicate that a harvest can be
                                           considered when the 3-year average                      emperor goose population; and                            Spectacled eiders (Somateria fischeri)
                                           abundance index is at least 80,000 birds.                  (4) A revised Pacific Flyway Emperor               and the Alaska-breeding population of
                                           This threshold has not been reached                     Goose Management Plan, including                      Steller’s eiders (Polysticta stelleri) are
                                           since 1984, and Alaska Natives have                     harvest allocation among all parties                  listed as threatened species. Their
                                           questioned the survey methods used to                   (including spring/summer and fall/                    migration and breeding distribution
                                           determine the population index.                         winter), population objective,                        overlap with areas where the spring and
                                              In addition, two studies are being                   population monitoring, and thresholds                 summer subsistence migratory bird hunt
                                           conducted concurrently by the Service                   for season restriction or closure.                    is open in Alaska. Both species are
                                           and the Alaska Department of Fish and                      The harvest allocation design and                  closed to hunting, although harvest
                                           Game. The first study is designed to                    harvest monitoring plan are to be                     surveys and Service documentation
                                           provide a comprehensive evaluation of                   completed by November 1, 2016.                        indicate both species have been taken in
                                           all available emperor goose survey data                 Additionally, there was an explicit                   several regions of Alaska.
                                           and assess harvest potential of the                     statement that the limited, legalized                    The Service has dual objectives and
                                           population. The second study is                         harvest of 3,500 birds was not in                     responsibilities for authorizing a
                                           designed to develop a Bayesian state                    addition to existing subsistence harvest              subsistence harvest while protecting
                                           space population model to improve                       (approximately 3,200 emperor geese).                  migratory birds and threatened species.
                                           estimates of population size by                         The 3,500-bird allowable harvest is to be             Although these objectives continue to be
                                           integrating current population                          allocated to subsistence users during the             challenging, they are not irreconcilable,
                                           assessment methods using all available                  spring and summer subsistence season.                 provided that regulations continue to
                                           data sets. The model provides a                         The SRC suggested that the allowable                  protect threatened species, measures to
                                           framework from which to make                            harvest should be monitored to ensure                 address documented threats are
                                           inferences about survival rates, age                    it does not exceed 3,500 birds.                       implemented, and the subsistence
                                           structure, and population size. The                        On August 13–14, and September 21,                 community and other conservation
                                           results of these studies will assist in                 2015, the Co-management Council                       partners commit to working together.
                                           amending the management plans.                          Native Caucus met separately and with                 With these dual objectives in mind, the
                                              The Service conducted the spring                     all partners to discuss options available             Service, working with North Slope
                                           emperor goose survey April 25–28,                       to limit and monitor the harvest, as well             partners, developed measures in 2009,
                                           2015, and results indicated that the                    as options to allocate the 3,500 birds                to further reduce the potential for
                                           2015 spring index (98,155) was 23                       across the six regions where emperor                  shooting mortality or injury of closed
                                           percent above the 2014 count (79,883),                  geese occur. Given the limited time                   species. These conservation measures
                                           and 49 percent higher than the long-                    provided to address the four conditions               included: (1) Increased waterfowl
                                           term (1981–2014) average (65,923). The                  placed on this new harvest by the SRC,                hunter outreach and community
                                           most recent 3-year average count (2012,                 all partners agreed that the best course              awareness through partnering with the
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                                           2014, 2015) is 81,875 geese and the                     of action would be to spend additional                North Slope Migratory Bird Task Force;
                                           highest on record since 1984. Further, it               time working together to develop a                    and (2) continued enforcement of the
                                           is above the threshold for consideration                culturally sensitive framework tailored               migratory bird regulations that are
                                           of an open hunting season on emperor                    to each participating region that                     protective of listed eiders.
                                           geese as specified in the Yukon-                        conserves the population and                             This final rule continues to focus on
                                           Kuskokwim Delta Goose Management                        adequately addresses the data needs of                the North Slope from Barrow to Point


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                                           18784                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 63 / Friday, April 1, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           Hope because Steller’s eiders from the                     The longstanding general emergency                 and related historical documents, on the
                                           listed Alaska breeding population are                   closure provision at 50 CFR 92.21                     Co-management Council’s Internet
                                           known to breed and migrate there.                       specifies that the harvest may be closed              homepage. We issued a press release
                                           These regulations are designed to                       or temporarily suspended upon finding                 announcing our request for public
                                           address several ongoing eider                           that a continuation of the regulation                 comments and the pertinent deadlines
                                           management needs by clarifying for                      allowing the harvest would pose an                    for such comments, which was faxed to
                                           subsistence users that (1) Service law                  imminent threat to the conservation of                the media Statewide in Alaska.
                                           enforcement personnel have authority to                 any migratory bird population. With                   Additionally, all documents were
                                           verify species of birds possessed by                    regard to Steller’s eiders, the regulations           available on http://www.regulations.gov.
                                           hunters, and (2) it is illegal to possess               at 50 CFR 92.32, carried over from the                The Service received two responses
                                           any species of bird closed to harvest.                  past 5 years, clarify that we will take               from the public.
                                           This rule also describes how the                        action under 50 CFR 92.21 as is
                                                                                                                                                         Response to Public Comments
                                           Service’s existing authority of                         necessary to prevent further take of
                                           emergency closure would be                              Steller’s eiders, and that action could                  Comment: We received one comment
                                           implemented, if necessary, to protect                   include temporary or long-term closures               on the overall regulations that expressed
                                           Steller’s eiders. We are always willing to              of the harvest in all or a portion of the             strong opposition to the concept of
                                           discuss regulations with our partners on                geographic area open to harvest. When                 allowing any harvest of migratory birds
                                           the North Slope to ensure protection of                 and if mortality of threatened eiders is              in Alaska.
                                           closed species as well as provide                       documented, we will evaluate each                        Service Response: For centuries,
                                           subsistence hunters an opportunity to                   mortality event by criteria such as                   indigenous inhabitants of Alaska have
                                           harvest migratory birds in a way that                   cause, quantity, sex, age, location, and              harvested migratory birds for
                                                                                                   date. We will consult with the Co-                    subsistence purposes during the spring
                                           maintains the culture and traditional
                                                                                                   management Council when we are                        and summer months. The Canada and
                                           harvest of the community. The
                                                                                                   considering an emergency closure. If we               Mexico migratory bird treaties were
                                           regulations pertaining to bag checks and
                                                                                                   determine that an emergency closure is                amended for the express purpose of
                                           possession of illegal birds are deemed
                                                                                                   necessary, we will design it to minimize              allowing subsistence hunting for
                                           necessary to monitor the number of
                                                                                                   its impact on the subsistence harvest.                migratory birds during the spring and
                                           closed eider species taken during the
                                                                                                                                                         summer. The amendments indicate that
                                           subsistence hunt.                                       Endangered Species Act Consideration                  the Service should issue regulations
                                              The Service is aware of and                            Section 7 of the Endangered Species                 allowing such hunting as provided in
                                           appreciates the considerable efforts by                 Act (16 U.S.C. 1536) requires the                     the Migratory Bird Treaty Act; see 16
                                           North Slope partners to raise awareness                 Secretary of the Interior to ‘‘review other           U.S.C. 712(1). Please refer to Statutory
                                           and educate hunters on Steller’s eider                  programs administered by him and                      Authority section, below, for more
                                           conservation via the bird fair, meetings,               utilize such programs in furtherance of               details.
                                           radio shows, signs, school visits, and                  the purposes of the Act’’ and to ‘‘insure                Comment: We received one comment
                                           one-on-one contacts. We also recognize                  that any action authorized, funded, or                encouraging the use of steel shot in rural
                                           that no listed eiders have been                         carried out * * * is not likely to                    Alaska.
                                           documented shot from 2009 through                       jeopardize the continued existence of                    Service Response: These subsistence
                                           2012; however, one Steller’s eider and                  any endangered species or threatened                  regulations have prohibited the
                                           one spectacled eider were found shot                    species or result in the destruction or               possession and use of non-toxic shot
                                           during the summer of 2013, and one                      adverse modification of [critical]                    since the program’s inception in 2003.
                                           Steller’s eider was found shot in 2014.                 habitat. * * *’’ We conducted an intra-               This has been a target of both outreach
                                           In 2015, one spectacled eider was found                 agency consultation with the Service’s                and enforcement through the years.
                                           dead, and it appeared to have been shot                 Fairbanks Fish and Wildlife Field Office                 Comment: We received one comment
                                           by a hunter. The Service acknowledges                   on this harvest as it will be managed in              requesting the reinstatement of a
                                           progress made with the other eider                      accordance with this final rule and the               mandatory Federal Migratory Bird
                                           conservation measures, including                        conservation measures. The                            Hunting and Conservation Stamp
                                           partnering with the North Slope                         consultation was completed with a                     (‘‘Duck Stamp’’) for hunters over 12 or
                                           Migratory Bird Task Force, for increased                biological opinion dated December 18,                 16 years of age.
                                           waterfowl hunter awareness, continued                   2015, that concluded the final rule and                  Service Response: On December 18,
                                           enforcement of the regulations, and in-                 conservation measures are not likely to               2014, President Obama signed into law
                                           season verification of the harvest. To                  jeopardize the continued existence of                 the Federal Duck Stamp Act of 2014
                                           reduce the threat of shooting mortality                 Steller’s and spectacled eiders or result             (Pub. L. 113–264). The Federal Duck
                                           of threatened eiders, we continue to                    in the destruction or adverse                         Stamp Act of 2014 amends the
                                           work with North Slope partners to                       modification of designated critical                   Migratory Bird Hunting and
                                           conduct education and outreach. In                      habitat.                                              Conservation Stamp Act (16 U.S.C.
                                           addition, the emergency closure                                                                               718a–718k, as amended) by, among
                                           authority provides another level of                     Summary of Public Involvement                         other things, adding an exemption from
                                           assurance if an unexpected number of                      On December 17, 2015, we published                  the requirement to purchase a Duck
                                           Steller’s eiders are killed by shooting                 in the Federal Register a proposed rule               Stamp for rural Alaska subsistence
                                           (50 CFR 92.21 and 50 CFR 92.32).                        (80 FR 78950) to establish spring and                 users. Specifically, the Federal Duck
                                              In-season harvest monitoring                         summer migratory bird subsistence                     Stamp Act of 2014 states that purchase
                                           information will be used to evaluate the                harvest regulations in Alaska for the                 of a Duck Stamp is not required ‘‘by a
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                                           efficacy of regulations, conservation                   2016 subsistence season. The proposed                 rural Alaska resident for subsistence
                                           measures, and outreach efforts.                         rule provided for a public comment                    uses (as that term is defined in section
                                           Conservation measures are being                         period of 60 days, ending February 16,                803 of the Alaska National Interest
                                           continued by the Service, with the                      2016. We posted an announcement of                    Lands Conservation Act [ANILCA] (16
                                           amount of effort and emphasis being                     the comment period dates for the                      U.S.C. 3113)).’’ ANILCA (Pub. L. 96–
                                           based on regulatory adherence.                          proposed rule, as well as the rule itself             487, 94 Stat. 2371) is codified, as


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 63 / Friday, April 1, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         18785

                                           amended, at 16 U.S.C. 410hh–3233 and                    Statutory Authority                                   Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                           43 U.S.C. 1602–1784. To remove this                                                                              The Department of the Interior
                                           exemption would require another                           We derive our authority to issue these
                                                                                                   regulations from the Migratory Bird                   certifies that, if adopted, this rule will
                                           congressional action.                                                                                         not have a significant economic impact
                                                                                                   Treaty Act of 1918, at 16 U.S.C. 712(1),
                                              Comment: We received one comment                     which authorizes the Secretary of the                 on a substantial number of small entities
                                           encouraging more hunter education                       Interior, in accordance with the treaties             as defined under the Regulatory
                                           classes in rural areas.                                 with Canada, Mexico, Japan, and Russia,               Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). A
                                              Service Response: Hunter education                   to ‘‘issue such regulations as may be                 regulatory flexibility analysis is not
                                           classes are coordinated and conducted                   necessary to assure that the taking of                required. Accordingly, a Small Entity
                                           by the Alaska Department of Fish and                    migratory birds and the collection of                 Compliance Guide is not required. This
                                           Game.                                                   their eggs, by the indigenous inhabitants             final rule would legalize a pre-existing
                                                                                                   of the State of Alaska, shall be permitted            subsistence activity, and the resources
                                              Comment: We received one comment
                                                                                                   for their own nutritional and other                   harvested will be consumed.
                                           saying we should encourage proper
                                           cooking and cleaning procedures and                     essential needs, as determined by the                 Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
                                           storage of harvested birds.                             Secretary of the Interior, during seasons             Fairness Act
                                              Service Response: The annual public                  established so as to provide for the
                                                                                                   preservation and maintenance of stocks                   This rule is not a major rule under 5
                                           regulations booklet for the subsistence                                                                       U.S.C. 804(2), the Small Business
                                           spring/summer migratory bird harvest                    of migratory birds.’’
                                                                                                                                                         Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act.
                                           has a special section on the last page                  Effective Date of This Rule                           This rule:
                                           dedicated to just these topics.                                                                                  (a) Will not have an annual effect on
                                              Comment: We received one comment                        The amendments to subpart D of 50                  the economy of $100 million or more. It
                                           saying we should attempt to minimize                    CFR part 92 will take effect less than 30             legalizes and regulates a traditional
                                           use of trail vehicles and motorized                     days after publication (see DATES,                    subsistence activity. It will not result in
                                           equipment during the nesting season.                    above). If there was a delay in the                   a substantial increase in subsistence
                                                                                                   effective date of these regulations after             harvest or a significant change in
                                              Service Response: Access to nesting                  this final rulemaking, subsistence
                                           areas is dictated by the local land owner                                                                     harvesting patterns. The commodities
                                                                                                   hunters would not be able to take full                that will be regulated under this final
                                           or manager. In the case of national                     advantage of their subsistence hunting
                                           wildlife refuges, contact the appropriate                                                                     rule are migratory birds. This rule deals
                                                                                                   opportunities. We therefore find that                 with legalizing the subsistence harvest
                                           Service refuge office directly to discuss               ‘‘good cause’’ exists justifying the earlier
                                           access issues.                                                                                                of migratory birds and, as such, does not
                                                                                                   start date, within the terms of 5 U.S.C.              involve commodities traded in the
                                              Comment: We received one comment                     553(d)(3) of the Administrative                       marketplace. A small economic benefit
                                           saying that local populations of sea                    Procedure Act, and under authority of                 from this final rule will derive from the
                                           ducks as well as geese should be more                   the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (July 3,                sale of equipment and ammunition to
                                           protected.                                              1918), as amended (16 U.S.C. 703–712).                carry out subsistence hunting. Most, if
                                              Service Response: Following declines                 Required Determinations                               not all, businesses that sell hunting
                                           from the 1960s to the 1980s, most sea                                                                         equipment in rural Alaska qualify as
                                           duck and other waterfowl populations                    Regulatory Planning and Review                        small businesses. We have no reason to
                                           have stabilized. For example, the 2015                  (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)                    believe that this final rule will lead to
                                           Environmental Assessment found that                                                                           a disproportionate distribution of
                                           common eiders have increased since the                    Executive Order 12866 provides that                 benefits.
                                           mid-1990s, while king eiders have                       the Office of Information and Regulatory                 (b) Will not cause a major increase in
                                           stabilized since 1996. Factors driving                  Affairs (OIRA) will review all significant            costs or prices for consumers;
                                           population fluctuations in sea duck                     rules. The OIRA has determined that                   individual industries; Federal, State, or
                                           populations are uncertain, but there is                 this rule is not significant.                         local government agencies; or
                                           some evidence that sea ducks are                          Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the                 geographic regions. This final rule does
                                           responding to large scale changes in the                principles of E.O. 12866 while calling                not deal with traded commodities and,
                                           marine environment. Harvested goose                     for improvements in the nation’s                      therefore, does not have an impact on
                                           populations are all generally high or                   regulatory system to promote                          prices for consumers.
                                           over management objectives. Total                       predictability, to reduce uncertainty,                   (c) Will not have significant adverse
                                           annual and long-term subsistence and                    and to use the best, most innovative,                 effects on competition, employment,
                                           sport harvest of waterfowl in Alaska and                and least burdensome tools for                        investment, productivity, innovation, or
                                           the Pacific Flyway are low relative to                  achieving regulatory ends. The                        the ability of U.S.-based enterprises to
                                           the size of their continental populations.              executive order directs agencies to                   compete with foreign-based enterprises.
                                           In general, we do not set regulations to                consider regulatory approaches that                   This final rule deals with the harvesting
                                           address waterfowl populations on a                      reduce burdens and maintain flexibility               of wildlife for personal consumption. It
                                           local scale because sport and                           and freedom of choice for the public                  does not regulate the marketplace in any
                                           subsistence harvest estimates and                       where these approaches are relevant,                  way to generate substantial effects on
                                           estimates of species abundance are very                 feasible, and consistent with regulatory              the economy or the ability of businesses
                                           imprecise at local scales. We set                       objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes                     to compete.
                                           subsistence harvest regulations on a                    further that regulations must be based
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                                           regional or statewide level based on                    on the best available science and that                Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                           species or subspecies continental                       the rulemaking process must allow for                   We have determined and certified
                                           population status. We would welcome                     public participation and an open                      under the Unfunded Mandates Reform
                                           any suggestions on how to make our                      exchange of ideas. We have developed                  Act (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) that this final
                                           regulations more effective in conserving                this rule in a manner consistent with                 rule will not impose a cost of $100
                                           local populations of hunted birds.                      these requirements.                                   million or more in any given year on


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                                           18786                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 63 / Friday, April 1, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           local, State, or tribal governments or                  Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order                 management bodies meet twice
                                           private entities. The final rule does not               12988)                                                annually to review and/or submit
                                           have a significant or unique effect on                     The Department, in promulgating this               proposals to the Statewide body.
                                           State, local, or tribal governments or the              final rule, has determined that it will               Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)
                                           private sector. A statement containing                  not unduly burden the judicial system
                                           the information required by the                         and that it meets the requirements of                   This final rule does not contain any
                                           Unfunded Mandates Reform Act is not                     sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive                new collections of information that
                                           required. Participation on regional                     Order 12988.                                          require Office of Management and
                                           management bodies and the Co-                                                                                 Budget (OMB) approval under the PRA
                                                                                                   Government-to-Government Relations
                                           management Council requires travel                                                                            (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). We may not
                                                                                                   With Native American Tribal
                                           expenses for some Alaska Native                                                                               conduct or sponsor and you are not
                                                                                                   Governments
                                           organizations and local governments. In                                                                       required to respond to a collection of
                                           addition, they assume some expenses                        Consistent with Executive Order                    information unless it displays a
                                           related to coordinating involvement of                  13175 (65 FR 67249; November 6, 2000),                currently valid OMB control number.
                                           village councils in the regulatory                      ‘‘Consultation and Coordination with                  OMB has reviewed and approved our
                                           process. Total coordination and travel                  Indian Tribal Governments’’, and                      collection of information associated
                                           expenses for all Alaska Native                          Department of Interior policy on                      with:
                                           organizations are estimated to be less                  Consultation with Indian Tribes                         • Voluntary annual household
                                                                                                   (December 1, 2011), in January 2016, we               surveys that we use to determine levels
                                           than $300,000 per year. In a notice of
                                                                                                   sent letters via electronic mail to all 229           of subsistence take (OMB Control
                                           decision (65 FR 16405; March 28, 2000),
                                                                                                   Alaska Federally recognized Indian                    Number 1018–0124, expires June 30,
                                           we identified 7 to 12 partner                           tribes. Consistent with Congressional
                                           organizations (Alaska Native nonprofits                                                                       2016).
                                                                                                   direction (Pub. L. 108–199, div. H, Sec.
                                           and local governments) to administer                    161, Jan. 23, 2004, 118 Stat. 452, as                   • Permits associated with subsistence
                                           the regional programs. The Alaska                       amended by Pub. L. 108–447, div. H,                   hunting (OMB Control Number 1018–
                                           Department of Fish and Game also                        title V, Sec. 518, Dec. 8, 2004, 118 Stat.            0075, expires April 30, 2016).
                                           incurs expenses for travel to Co-                       3267), we also sent letters to                        National Environmental Policy Act
                                           management Council and regional                         approximately 200 Alaska Native                       Consideration (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.)
                                           management body meetings. In                            corporations and other tribal entities in
                                           addition, the State of Alaska will be                   Alaska soliciting their input as to                      The annual regulations and options
                                           required to provide technical staff                     whether or not they would like the                    are considered in an October 2016
                                           support to each of the regional                         Service to consult with them on the                   environmental assessment, ‘‘Managing
                                           management bodies and to the Co-                        2016 migratory bird subsistence harvest               Migratory Bird Subsistence Hunting in
                                           management Council. Expenses for the                    regulations. We received one response                 Alaska: Hunting Regulations for the
                                           State’s involvement may exceed                          that requested consultation. We                       2016 Spring/Summer Harvest,’’ dated
                                           $100,000 per year, but should not                       conducted one consultation with a                     October 9, 2015. Copies are available
                                           exceed $150,000 per year. When                          Native Traditional Council on February                from the person listed under FOR
                                           funding permits, we make annual grant                   16, 2016. The tribal contacts were happy              FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT or at
                                           agreements available to the partner                     with the information provided and did                 http://www.regulations.gov.
                                           organizations and the Alaska                            not have any specific comments on the
                                                                                                   regulations.                                          Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
                                           Department of Fish and Game to help                                                                           (Executive Order 13211)
                                           offset their expenses.                                     We implemented the amended treaty
                                                                                                   with Canada with a focus on local                        Executive Order 13211 requires
                                           Takings (Executive Order 12630)                         involvement. The treaty calls for the                 agencies to prepare Statements of
                                                                                                   creation of management bodies to                      Energy Effects when undertaking certain
                                              Under the criteria in Executive Order                ensure an effective and meaningful role
                                           12630, this final rule will not have                                                                          actions. This is not a significant
                                                                                                   for Alaska’s indigenous inhabitants in                regulatory action under this Executive
                                           significant takings implications. This                  the conservation of migratory birds.
                                           final rule is not specific to particular                                                                      Order; it would allow only for
                                                                                                   According to the Letter of Submittal,                 traditional subsistence harvest and
                                           land ownership, but applies to the                      management bodies are to include                      improve conservation of migratory birds
                                           harvesting of migratory bird resources                  Alaska Native, Federal, and State of                  by allowing effective regulation of this
                                           throughout Alaska. A takings                            Alaska representatives as equals. They                harvest. Further, this final rule is not
                                           implication assessment is not required.                 develop recommendations for, among                    expected to significantly affect energy
                                                                                                   other things: Seasons and bag limits,                 supplies, distribution, or use. Therefore,
                                           Federalism (Executive Order 13132)                      methods and means of take, law                        this action is not a significant energy
                                              Under the criteria in Executive Order                enforcement policies, population and                  action under Executive Order 13211,
                                           13132, this final rule does not have                    harvest monitoring, education programs,               and a Statement of Energy Effects is not
                                           sufficient federalism implications to                   research and use of traditional                       required.
                                           warrant the preparation of a federalism                 knowledge, and habitat protection. The
                                                                                                   management bodies involve village                     List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 92
                                           summary impact statement. We discuss
                                                                                                   councils to the maximum extent
                                           effects of this final rule on the State of                                                                       Hunting, Treaties, Wildlife.
                                                                                                   possible in all aspects of management.
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                                           Alaska in the Unfunded Mandates
                                                                                                   To ensure maximum input at the village                Regulation Promulgation
                                           Reform Act section, above. We worked                    level, we required each of the 11
                                           with the State of Alaska to develop                     participating regions to create regional                For the reasons set out in the
                                           these final regulations. Therefore, a                   management bodies consisting of at                    preamble, we amend title 50, chapter I,
                                           federalism summary impact statement is                  least one representative from the                     subchapter G, of the Code of Federal
                                           not required.                                           participating villages. The regional                  Regulations as follows:


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                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 63 / Friday, April 1, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                       18787

                                           PART 92—MIGRATORY BIRD                                    (4) Bonaparte’s gull (Chroicocephalus               (general season); April 2–July 15 for
                                           SUBSISTENCE HARVEST IN ALASKA                           philadelphia).                                        seabird egg gathering only.
                                                                                                   *     *     *    *     *                                (2) Closure: June 15–July 15 (general
                                           ■ 1. The authority citation for part 92                   (15) Aleutian tern (Onychoprion                     season); July 16–August 31 (seabird egg
                                           continues to read as follows:                           aleuticus).                                           gathering).
                                               Authority: 16 U.S.C. 703–712.                       *     *     *    *     *                                (d) Bering Strait/Norton Sound
                                                                                                     (l) * * *                                           Region. (1) Stebbins/St. Michael Area
                                           Subpart A—General Provisions                              (2) Snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus).                    (Point Romanof to Canal Point):
                                                                                                                                                           (i) Season: April 15–June 14 and July
                                           ■  2. Amend § 92.4 by adding, in                        Subpart D—Annual Regulations                          16–August 31.
                                           alphabetical order, a definition for                    Governing Subsistence Harvest                           (ii) Closure: June 15–July 15.
                                           ‘‘Edible meat’’ and revising the                                                                                (2) Remainder of the region:
                                           definition for ‘‘Nonwasteful taking’’ to                ■ 4. Amend subpart D by adding § 92.31                  (i) Season: April 2–June 14 and July
                                           read as follows:                                        to read as follows:                                   16–August 31 for waterfowl; April 2–
                                           § 92.4   Definitions.                                   § 92.31   Region-specific regulations.                July 19 and August 21–August 31 for all
                                                                                                                                                         other birds.
                                           *     *     *     *     *                                 The 2016 season dates for the eligible
                                              Edible meat means the meat from the                                                                          (ii) Closure: June 15–July 15 for
                                                                                                   subsistence harvest areas are as follows:
                                           breast, back, thighs, legs, wings, gizzard,                                                                   waterfowl; July 20–August 20 for all
                                                                                                     (a) Aleutian/Pribilof Islands Region.
                                           and heart. The head, neck, feet, other                                                                        other birds.
                                                                                                   (1) Northern Unit (Pribilof Islands):
                                           internal organs, and skin are considered                                                                        (e) Kodiak Archipelago Region, except
                                                                                                     (i) Season: April 2–June 30.
                                           inedible byproducts, and not edible                       (ii) Closure: July 1–August 31.                     for the Kodiak Island roaded area,
                                           meat, for all provisions of this part.                    (2) Central Unit (Aleutian Region’s                 which is closed to the harvesting of
                                                                                                   eastern boundary on the Alaska                        migratory birds and their eggs. The
                                           *     *     *     *     *                                                                                     closed area consists of all lands and
                                              Nonwasteful taking means making a                    Peninsula westward to and including
                                                                                                   Unalaska Island):                                     waters (including exposed tidelands)
                                           reasonable effort to retrieve all birds                                                                       east of a line extending from Crag Point
                                           killed or wounded, and retaining all                      (i) Season: April 2–June 15 and July
                                                                                                   16–August 31.                                         in the north to the west end of Saltery
                                           edible meat until the birds have been                                                                         Cove in the south and all lands and
                                           transported to the location where they                    (ii) Closure: June 16–July 15.
                                                                                                     (iii) Special Black Brant Season                    water south of a line extending from
                                           will be consumed, processed, or                                                                               Termination Point along the north side
                                           preserved as human food.                                Closure: August 16–August 31, only in
                                                                                                   Izembek and Moffet lagoons.                           of Cascade Lake extending to Anton
                                           *     *     *     *     *                                                                                     Larsen Bay. Marine waters adjacent to
                                                                                                     (iv) Special Tundra Swan Closure: All
                                                                                                   hunting and egg gathering closed in                   the closed area are closed to harvest
                                           Subpart C—General Regulations                                                                                 within 500 feet from the water’s edge.
                                           Governing Subsistence Harvest                           Game Management Units 9(D) and 10.
                                                                                                     (3) Western Unit (Umnak Island west                 The offshore islands are open to harvest.
                                           ■  3. Amend § 92.22 by:                                 to and including Attu Island):                          (1) Season: April 2–June 30 and July
                                           ■  a. Revising paragraph (a)(3);                          (i) Season: April 2–July 15 and August              31–August 31 for seabirds; April 2–June
                                           ■  b. Removing and reserving paragraph                  16–August 31.                                         20 and July 22–August 31 for all other
                                           (a)(4); and                                               (ii) Closure: July 16–August 15.                    birds.
                                           ■ c. Revising paragraphs (a)(5) and (6),                  (b) Yukon/Kuskokwim Delta Region.                     (2) Closure: July 1–July 30 for
                                           (i)(3), (13), and (15), (j)(4) and (15), and            (1) Season: April 2–August 31.                        seabirds; June 21–July 21 for all other
                                           (l)(2).                                                   (2) Closure: 30-day closure dates to be             birds.
                                              The revisions read as follows:                       announced by the Service’s Alaska                       (f) Northwest Arctic Region. (1)
                                                                                                   Regional Director or his designee, after              Season: April 2–June 9 and August 15–
                                           § 92.22 Subsistence migratory bird                      consultation with field biologists and                August 31 (hunting in general);
                                           species.                                                the Association of Village Council                    waterfowl egg gathering May 20–June 9
                                           *      *     *   *    *                                 President’s Waterfowl Conservation                    only; seabird egg gathering May 20–July
                                             (a) * * *                                             Committee. This 30-day period will                    12 only; hunting molting/non-nesting
                                             (3) Canada goose (Branta canadensis).                 occur between June 1 and August 15 of                 waterfowl July 1–July 31 only.
                                           *      *     *   *    *                                 each year. A press release announcing                   (2) Closure: June 10–August 14,
                                             (5) Canada goose, subspecies Aleutian                 the actual closure dates will be                      except for the taking of seabird eggs and
                                           goose—except in the Semidi Islands.                     forwarded to regional newspapers and                  molting/non-nesting waterfowl as
                                             (6) Canada goose, subspecies cackling                 radio and television stations.                        provided in paragraph (f)(1) of this
                                           goose—except no egg gathering is                          (3) Special Black Brant and Cackling                section.
                                           permitted.                                              Goose Season Hunting Closure: From                      (g) North Slope Region. (1) Southern
                                           *      *     *   *    *                                 the period when egg laying begins until               Unit (Southwestern North Slope
                                             (i) * * *                                             young birds are fledged. Closure dates to             regional boundary east to Peard Bay,
                                             (3) Spotted sandpiper (Actitis                        be announced by the Service’s Alaska                  everything west of the longitude line
                                           macularius).                                            Regional Director or his designee, after              158°3′ W. and south of the latitude line
                                                                                                   consultation with field biologists and                70°45′ N. to the west bank of the
                                           *      *     *   *    *                                 the Association of Village Council                    Ikpikpuk River, and everything south of
                                             (13) Wilson’s snipe (Gallinago                        President’s Waterfowl Conservation                    the latitude line 69°45′ N. between the
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                                           delicata).                                              Committee. A press release announcing                 west bank of the Ikpikpuk River to the
                                           *      *     *   *    *                                 the actual closure dates will be                      east bank of Sagavinirktok River):
                                             (15) Red phalarope (Phalaropus                        forwarded to regional newspapers and                    (i) Season: April 2–June 29 and July
                                           fulicarius).                                            radio and television stations.                        30–August 31 for seabirds; April 2–June
                                           *      *     *   *    *                                   (c) Bristol Bay Region. (1) Season:                 19 and July 20–August 31 for all other
                                             (j) * * *                                             April 2–June 14 and July 16–August 31                 birds.


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                                           18788                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 63 / Friday, April 1, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                              (ii) Closure: June 30–July 29 for                    documented traditional use harvesting                   (l) Southeast Alaska. (1) Community
                                           seabirds; June 20–July 19 for all other                 birds in Game Management Unit 12,                     of Hoonah (Harvest area: National Forest
                                           birds.                                                  making them eligible to hunt in this unit             lands in Icy Strait and Cross Sound,
                                              (iii) Special Black Brant Hunting                    using the seasons specified in paragraph              including Middle Pass Rock near the
                                           Opening: From June 20–July 5. The                       (h) of this section.                                  Inian Islands, Table Rock in Cross
                                           open area consists of the coastline, from                  (j) Gulf of Alaska Region. (1) Prince              Sound, and other traditional locations
                                           mean high water line outward to                         William Sound Area West (Harvest area:                on the coast of Yakobi Island. The land
                                           include open water, from Nokotlek                       Game Management Unit 6[D]), (Eligible                 and waters of Glacier Bay National Park
                                           Point east to longitude line 158°30′ W.                 Chugach communities: Chenega Bay,                     remain closed to all subsistence
                                           This includes Peard Bay, Kugrua Bay,                    Tatitlek):                                            harvesting (50 CFR part 100.3(a)):
                                           and Wainwright Inlet, but not the Kuk                      (i) Season: April 2–May 31 and July
                                           and Kugrua river drainages.                             1–August 31.                                            (i) Season: Glaucous-winged gull egg
                                              (2) Northern Unit (At Peard Bay,                        (ii) Closure: June 1–30.                           gathering only: May 15–June 30.
                                           everything east of the longitude line                      (2) Prince William Sound Area East                   (ii) Closure: July 1–August 31.
                                           158°30′ W. and north of the latitude line               (Harvest area: Game Management Units
                                                                                                                                                           (2) Communities of Craig and
                                           70°45′ N. to west bank of the Ikpikpuk                  6[B] and [C]—Barrier Islands between
                                           River, and everything north of the                                                                            Hydaburg (Harvest area: Small islands
                                                                                                   Strawberry Channel and Softtuk Bar),
                                           latitude line 69°45′ N. between the west                (Eligible Chugach communities:                        and adjacent shoreline of western Prince
                                           bank of the Ikpikpuk River to the east                  Cordova):                                             of Wales Island from Point Baker to
                                           bank of Sagavinirktok River):                              (i) Season: April 2–April 30 (hunting);            Cape Chacon, but also including
                                              (i) Season: April 2–June 6 and July 7–               May 1–May 31 (gull egg gathering).                    Coronation and Warren islands):
                                           August 31 for king and common eiders;                      (ii) Closure: May 1–August 31                        (i) Season: Glaucous-winged gull egg
                                           April 2–June 15 and July 16–August 31                   (hunting); April 2–30 and June 1–                     gathering only: May 15–June 30.
                                           for all other birds.                                    August 31 (gull egg gathering).
                                              (ii) Closure: June 7–July 6 for king and                                                                     (ii) Closure: July 1–August 31.
                                                                                                      (iii) Species Open for Hunting:
                                           common eiders; June 16–July 15 for all                  Greater white-fronted goose; snow                       (3) Community of Yakutat (Harvest
                                           other birds.                                            goose; gadwall; Eurasian and American                 area: Icy Bay (Icy Cape to Point Riou),
                                              (3) Eastern Unit (East of eastern bank               wigeon; blue-winged and green-winged                  and coastal lands and islands bordering
                                           of the Sagavanirktok River):                            teal; mallard; northern shoveler;                     the Gulf of Alaska from Point Manby
                                              (i) Season: April 2–June 19 and July                 northern pintail; canvasback; redhead;                southeast to and including Dry Bay):
                                           20–August 31.                                           ring-necked duck; greater and lesser
                                              (ii) Closure: June 20–July 19.                                                                               (i) Season: glaucous-winged gull egg
                                                                                                   scaup; king and common eider;                         gathering: May 15–June 30.
                                              (4) All Units: Yellow-billed loons.
                                                                                                   harlequin duck; surf, white-winged, and
                                           Annually, up to 20 yellow-billed loons                                                                          (ii) Closure: July 1–August 31.
                                                                                                   black scoter; long-tailed duck;
                                           total for the region inadvertently
                                                                                                   bufflehead; common and Barrow’s                       ■ 5. Amend subpart D by adding § 92.32
                                           entangled in subsistence fishing nets in
                                                                                                   goldeneye; hooded, common, and red-                   to read as follows:
                                           the North Slope Region may be kept for
                                                                                                   breasted merganser; and sandhill crane.
                                           subsistence use.                                                                                              § 92.32 Emergency regulations to protect
                                              (5) North Coastal Zone (Cape                         Species open for egg gathering:
                                                                                                   glaucous-winged, herring, and mew                     Steller’s eiders.
                                           Thompson north to Point Hope and east
                                           along the Arctic Ocean coastline around                 gulls.                                                   Upon finding that continuation of
                                           Point Barrow to Ross Point, including                      (iv) Use of Boats/All-Terrain Vehicles:            these subsistence regulations would
                                           Iko Bay, and 5 miles inland).                           No hunting from motorized vehicles or                 pose an imminent threat to the
                                              (i) No person may at any time, by any                any form of watercraft.                               conservation of threatened Steller’s
                                           means, or in any manner, possess or                        (v) Special Registration: All hunters or           eiders (Polysticta stelleri,) the U.S. Fish
                                           have in custody any migratory bird or                   egg gatherers must possess an annual                  and Wildlife Service Alaska Regional
                                           part thereof, taken in violation of                     permit, which is available from the
                                                                                                                                                         Director, in consultation with the Co-
                                           subparts C and D of this part.                          Cordova offices of the Native Village of
                                                                                                                                                         management Council, will immediately
                                              (ii) Upon request from a Service law                 Eyak and the U.S. Forest Service.
                                                                                                      (3) Kachemak Bay Area (Harvest area:               under § 92.21 take action as is necessary
                                           enforcement officer, hunters taking,                                                                          to prevent further take. Regulation
                                           attempting to take, or transporting                     Game Management Unit 15[C] South of
                                                                                                   a line connecting the tip of Homer Spit               changes implemented could range from
                                           migratory birds taken during the                                                                              a temporary closure of duck hunting in
                                           subsistence harvest season must present                 to the mouth of Fox River) (Eligible
                                                                                                   Chugach Communities: Port Graham,                     a small geographic area to large-scale
                                           them to the officer for species                                                                               regional or Statewide long-term closures
                                           identification.                                         Nanwalek):
                                                                                                      (i) Season: April 2–May 31 and July                of all subsistence migratory bird
                                              (h) Interior Region. (1) Season: April
                                                                                                   1–August 31.                                          hunting. These closures or temporary
                                           2–June 14 and July 16–August 31; egg
                                           gathering May 1–June 14 only.                              (ii) Closure: June 1–30.                           suspensions will remain in effect until
                                              (2) Closure: June 15–July 15.                           (k) Cook Inlet (Harvest area: portions             the Regional Director, in consultation
                                              (i) Upper Copper River Region                        of Game Management Unit 16[B] as                      with the Co-management Council,
                                           (Harvest Area: Game Management Units                    specified below) (Eligible communities:               determines that the potential for
                                           11 and 13) (Eligible communities:                       Tyonek only):                                         additional Steller’s eiders to be taken no
                                           Gulkana, Chitina, Tazlina, Copper                          (1) Season: April 2–May 31—That                    longer exists.
                                           Center, Gakona, Mentasta Lake,                          portion of Game Management Unit 16(B)
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                                                                                                                                                           Dated: March 21, 2016.
                                           Chistochina and Cantwell).                              south of the Skwentna River and west
                                                                                                                                                         Karen Hyun,
                                              (1) Season: April 15–May 26 and June                 of the Yentna River, and August 1–31—
                                           27–August 31.                                           That portion of Game Management Unit                  Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish
                                              (2) Closure: May 27–June 26.                         16(B) south of the Beluga River, Beluga               and Wildlife and Parks.
                                              (3) The Copper River Basin                           Lake, and the Triumvirate Glacier.                    [FR Doc. 2016–07398 Filed 3–31–16; 8:45 am]
                                           communities listed above also                              (2) Closure: June 1–July 31.                       BILLING CODE 4333–15–P




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Document Created: 2016-04-06 00:08:19
Document Modified: 2016-04-06 00:08:19
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
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThe amendments to subpart D of 50 CFR part 92 are effective April 2, 2016, through August 31, 2016. The amendments to subparts A and C of 50 CFR part 92 are effective May 2, 2016.
ContactDonna Dewhurst, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1011 E. Tudor Road, Mail Stop 201, Anchorage, AK 99503; (907) 786-3499.
FR Citation81 FR 18781 
RIN Number1018-BB10
CFR AssociatedHunting; Treaties and Wildlife

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