81_FR_26714 81 FR 26629 - Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to the Skagway Gateway Initiative Project

81 FR 26629 - Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to the Skagway Gateway Initiative Project

DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 85 (May 3, 2016)

Page Range26629-26658
FR Document2016-10266

NMFS has received a request from the Municipality of Skagway (MOS) for authorization to take marine mammals incidental to reconstructing the existing ore dock in Skagway Harbor, Alaska, referred to as the Skagway Gateway Initiative project. The MOS requests that the IHA be valid for 1 year, from July 1, 2016 through June 30, 2017. Pursuant to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is requesting public comment on its proposal to issue an incidental harassment authorization (IHA) to the MOS to incidentally take, marine mammals for its reconstruction of the Skagway ore terminal in Skagway, AK.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 85 (Tuesday, May 3, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 85 (Tuesday, May 3, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 26629-26658]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-10266]



[[Page 26629]]

Vol. 81

Tuesday,

No. 85

May 3, 2016

Part II





 Department of Commerce





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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration





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 Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking 
Marine Mammals Incidental to the Skagway Gateway Initiative Project; 
Notice

Federal Register / Vol. 81 , No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / 
Notices

[[Page 26630]]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

RIN 0648-XE440


Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; 
Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to the Skagway Gateway Initiative 
Project

AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental harassment authorization; request 
for comments.

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SUMMARY: NMFS has received a request from the Municipality of Skagway 
(MOS) for authorization to take marine mammals incidental to 
reconstructing the existing ore dock in Skagway Harbor, Alaska, 
referred to as the Skagway Gateway Initiative project. The MOS requests 
that the IHA be valid for 1 year, from July 1, 2016 through June 30, 
2017. Pursuant to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS is 
requesting public comment on its proposal to issue an incidental 
harassment authorization (IHA) to the MOS to incidentally take, marine 
mammals for its reconstruction of the Skagway ore terminal in Skagway, 
AK.

DATES: Comments and information must be received no later than June 2, 
2016.

ADDRESSES: Comments on the application should be addressed to Jolie 
Harrison, Chief, Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected 
Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service. Physical comments should 
be sent to 1315 East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 and 
electronic comments should be sent to ITP.mccue@noaa.gov.
    Instructions: NMFS is not responsible for comments sent by any 
other method, to any other address or individual, or received after the 
end of the comment period. Comments received electronically, including 
all attachments, must not exceed a 25-megabyte file size. Attachments 
to electronic comments will be accepted in Microsoft Word or Excel or 
Adobe PDF file formats only. All comments received are a part of the 
public record and will generally be posted to the Internet at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental/construction.htm without 
change. All personal identifying information (e.g., name, address) 
voluntarily submitted by the commenter may be publicly accessible. Do 
not submit confidential business information or otherwise sensitive or 
protected information.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Laura McCue, Office of Protected 
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Availability

    An electronic copy of the MOS's application and supporting 
documents, as well as a list of the references cited in this document, 
may be obtained by visiting the Internet at: http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental/construction.htm. In case of problems accessing 
these documents, please call the contact listed above.

National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)

    We are preparing an Environmental Assessment (EA) in accordance 
with NEPA and the regulations published by the Council on Environmental 
Quality and will consider comments submitted in response to this notice 
as part of that process. The EA will be posted at the foregoing Web 
site once it is finalized.

Background

    Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.) 
direct the Secretary of Commerce to allow, upon request by U.S. 
citizens who engage in a specified activity (other than commercial 
fishing) within a specified area, the incidental, but not intentional, 
taking of small numbers of marine mammals, providing that certain 
findings are made and the necessary prescriptions are established.
    The incidental taking of small numbers of marine mammals may be 
allowed only if NMFS (through authority delegated by the Secretary) 
finds that the total taking by the specified activity during the 
specified time period will (i) have a negligible impact on the species 
or stock(s) and (ii) not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the 
availability of the species or stock(s) for subsistence uses (where 
relevant). Further, the permissible methods of taking and requirements 
pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring and reporting of such taking 
must be set forth, either in specific regulations or in an 
authorization.
    The allowance of such incidental taking under section 101(a)(5)(A), 
by harassment, serious injury, death, or a combination thereof, 
requires that regulations be established. Subsequently, a Letter of 
Authorization may be issued pursuant to the prescriptions established 
in such regulations, providing that the level of taking will be 
consistent with the findings made for the total taking allowable under 
the specific regulations. Under section 101(a)(5)(D), NMFS may 
authorize such incidental taking by harassment only, for periods of not 
more than one year, pursuant to requirements and conditions contained 
within an Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA). The establishment 
of prescriptions through either specific regulations or an 
authorization requires notice and opportunity for public comment.
    NMFS has defined ``negligible impact'' in 50 CFR 216.103 as ``an 
impact resulting from the specified activity that cannot be reasonably 
expected to, and is not reasonably likely to, adversely affect the 
species or stock through effects on annual rates of recruitment or 
survival.'' Except with respect to certain activities not pertinent 
here, the MMPA defines ``harassment'' as: any act of pursuit, torment, 
or annoyance which (i) has the potential to injure a marine mammal or 
marine mammal stock in the wild [Level A harassment]; or (ii) has the 
potential to disturb a marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild 
by causing disruption of behavioral patterns, including, but not 
limited to, migration, breathing, nursing, breeding, feeding, or 
sheltering [Level B harassment].

Summary of Request

    On December 2, 2015, NMFS received an application from the 
Municipality of Skagway (MOS) for the taking of marine mammal 
incidental to reconstructing the Skagway ore terminal (SOT) in Skaway 
Harbor, Skagway, Alaska, referred to as the Skagway Gateway Initiative 
project. On January 22, 2016 and March 14, 2016, and March 17, 2016 
NMFS received revised applications. NMFS determined that the 
application was adequate and complete on April 1, 2016. MOS proposes to 
conduct in-water work that may incidentally harass marine mammals 
(i.e., pile driving and removal) at the ore terminal. Take, by Level B 
Harassment, of individuals of six species of marine mammals is 
anticipated to results from the specified activity. This IHA would be 
valid from July 1, 2016 through June 30, 2017.

Description of the Specified Activity

Overview

    The MOS is seeking an IHA for work that includes demolition of 
existing in-water and over-water infrastructure including in-water 
removal of timber, steel, and concrete piling; mechanical dredging of 
and upland beneficial reuse or disposal of contaminated sediments in 
the Skagway Ore Terminal (SOT)

[[Page 26631]]

basin of Skagway Harbor; and construction of new infrastructure 
including a bulkhead wall at the northern end of the Terminal basin, a 
wharf structure at the western edge of the SOT, an ore loader and 
supporting infrastructure, seven new or refurbished moorage dolphins 
and associated catwalks, and a concrete floating dock and associated 
gangways (or an additional three moorage dolphins and catwalks, 
depending on funding). Development of this new infrastructure involves 
a combination of in-water, over-water, and upland work.
    The project's timing, duration, and specific types of activities 
(such as pile driving and dredging) may result in the incidental taking 
by acoustical harassment of marine mammals protected under the MMPA. 
The MOS is requesting an IHA for six marine mammal species: Harbor seal 
(Phoca viutlina), Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus), harbor 
porpoise (Phocoena phocoena), Dall's porpoise (Phocoenoides dalli), 
killer whale (Orcinus orca), and humpback whale (Megaptera 
novaeangliae), that may occur in the vicinity of the project.

Dates and Duration

    Pile installation and extraction associated with the SOT project 
will begin no sooner than July 01, 2016 and will be completed no later 
than June 30, 2016 (1 year following IHA issuance). Pile driving 
activities are proposed to occur from the end of July to the beginning 
of October 2016 and again in March 2017 for a total of about 155 hours 
over the course of approximately 73 days in 2016 and 2017. Pile removal 
will occur in July 2016 and December 2016 to January 2017 for a total 
of about 117 hours over the course of approximately 39 days in 2016 and 
2017. Dredging will occur from January through the beginning of March 
2017, for a total of about 400 hours over 40 days in the winter of 
2017.
    To minimize impacts to Hooligan (Thaleichtys pacificus), Pacific 
herring (Clupea pallasii), capelin (Mallotus catervarius), and other 
forage fish species that are part of the prey base for many marine 
mammals including seals, sea lions, and baleen whales, in-water 
construction timing has been planned to avoid major spawning and 
migration times (April 1 through May 31).

Specified Geographic Region

    The proposed activities will occur at the SOT located in Skagway 
Harbor, Alaska, on the Taiya Inlet/Lynn Canal water body. The Project 
is located in Section 26 and 35, T 30 S, R 59 E, Copper River Meridian; 
United States Geological Survey Quad Map Skagway B-1; Latitude 59.45 
degrees North (N), Longitude 135.31 degrees West (W) (see Figure 1 of 
the MOS's application). Skagway Harbor is located at the southwestern 
end of the 2.5-mile-long Skagway River valley. The Skagway River 
empties into Taiya Inlet at the head of Lynn Canal, the northernmost 
fjord on the Inside Passage of the south coast of Alaska. Pullen Creek 
empties into the inlet on the southeast side of the valley.

Detailed Description of Activities

    The proposed action for this IHA request includes demolition of 
existing in- and overwater infrastructure including in-water removal of 
timber, steel, and concrete piling; mechanical dredging of and upland 
beneficial reuse or disposal of contaminated sediments in the SOT basin 
(Terminal basin) of Skagway Harbor; and construction of new 
infrastructure including a bulkhead wall at the northern end of the 
Terminal basin, a wharf structure at the western edge of the SOT, an 
ore loader and supporting infrastructure, seven new or refurbished 
moorage dolphins and associated catwalks, and a concrete floating dock 
and associated gangways (or an additional three moorage dolphins and 
catwalks, depending on funding).
    The SOT was constructed in 1968, and pier access accommodates 
vessels in the 35,000 DWT class (AIDEA 2008). The Port of Skagway has 
provided key transportation import/export capacity for the Yukon for 
over a century. The construction activities are designed to upgrade and 
enhance current shipping needs and increase the capacity and efficiency 
of the existing terminal for shipment and export. It will spring open 
new international business from cruise ships, container traffic, mining 
resources, and energy production, revitalizing investment in Skagway, 
the Port and the Region.
    Existing structures to be demolished include the eastern extent of 
the timber pier, the ore loader and concrete and steel foundation, fuel 
infrastructure (timber dock and piping), the concrete Alaska Marine 
Lines (AML) pier, and up to five concrete and steel moorage dolphins 
(see sheets 1 and 2 of the MOS's application). The existing 
infrastructure will be demolished using heavy, land- or water-based 
(i.e., from a barge) equipment. The contractor will be required to 
implement best management practices (BMPs) to minimize environmental 
impacts from demolition. In total, demolition actions are expected to 
take 39 days to complete.
    Demolition of the infrastructure will generally occur as follows: 
Above-water infrastructure, including concrete pads, timber decking, 
pile caps, utilities, and piping will be removed. Timber piles will 
then be extracted entirely using a vibratory hammer or broken off at 
the mudline if extraction is not practical. The timber piles will be 
removed as both a source control measure (i.e., through removal of 
creosote-treated timber piles) and as a necessary step to perform 
environmental dredging in this area. Table 1 shows the total number of 
piles to be removed during demolition.

          Table 1--Number of Piles To Be Removed via Demolition
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             Number of
                                             Creosote-       Number of
                                           treated piles  steel piles to
                                           to be removed    be removed
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Timber Pier.............................             400              50
Ore Loader..............................               0              50
AML Pier................................               0              15
Fuel Infrastructure.....................               0               4
Moorage Dolphins2.......................               0               0
                                         -------------------------------
    Total...............................             400             119
------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 26632]]

    The vertical and horizontal boundaries of the proposed dredging 
were designed to remove impacted sediments (i.e., sediments with metals 
and/or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) concentrations exceeding 
the sediment cleanup objectives [SCOs]). The SCOs were chosen to be the 
cleanup objective level based on discussions in the April 13, 2015, 
meeting between Bruce Wanstall (ADEC), Dr. Chad Gubala (MOS), and Derek 
Koellmann (Anchor QEA). The current estimated dredge volume (including 
a 1-foot over-dredge to account for equipment tolerances) is 41,000 
ft\2\, and the associated approximate surface area is 21,245 ft\2\, 
pending final design and geotechnical and structural considerations, 
for a total surface area of 62,245 ft\2\ to be removed. The estimated 
contaminated material planned to be removed is 17,300 cubic yards. An 
additional 9,000 cubic yards of uncontaminated material may be dredged 
for the installation of the floating dock. Pending the outcome of a 
treatability study, dredged sediments will either be beneficially 
reused in upland areas or transported to a suitable upland landfill at 
the discretion of ADEC.
    All dredging will be performed using up-to a seven-cubic-yard 
clamshell bucket. Use of an environmental bucket was considered, but 
was deemed infeasible given the nature and composition of the sediments 
to be dredged. As noted in the demolitions section, specific overwater 
structures are planned to be demolished prior to the start of dredging. 
In total, dredging actions are expected to take 40 days to complete.
    Construction of new in- and overwater infrastructure is proposed, 
including the AML bulkhead wall, wharf structure, and ore loader. In 
addition, either a concrete floating dock or additional moorage 
dolphins connected by a catwalk will be constructed. Whether the 
concrete floating dock or moorage dolphins and catwalk are constructed 
depends on available funding. All piles will be installed using a 
vibratory and/or impact hammer. Piles to be installed are summarized in 
Table 2.

                                                             Table 2--Piles To Be Installed
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                       Pile size and number                               Square footage
                    Project component                    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------  of sea floor
                                                               24 in           36 in           48 in           60 in           Total          impacts
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AML Bulkhead Wall.......................................               0               0               0               0               0               0
Wharf Structure at Ore Dock.............................              16              20               4               0              40           241.9
Ore Loader and Foundation...............................               0              58               0               0              58           410.0
Moorage Dolphins and Catwalk............................               0              70               0               0              70           494.8
Fuel Infrastructure.....................................               0              17               0               0              17           120.2
Concrete Floating Dock Structure........................               3              14               0               7              21           245.8
                                                         -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total, Concrete Floating Dock.......................              19             179               4               7             209         1,512.7
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed wharf bulkhead wall will be constructed of steel sheet 
pile walls in the form of a rectangle of approximately 220 by 75 feet 
(16,500 square feet). The top of the walls will be at approximately 30 
feet above MLLW, and the future bottom of the walls at a depth of -4 
feet MLLW. The structure will be filled with 2,000 to 4,000 cubic yards 
of suitable dredged material, of which 150 to 300 cubic yards will be 
placed below MHHW. The ground surface where fill will be placed is 
primarily above MHHW. Only fill placed in the southeastern corner of 
the structure will be within the intertidal zone. The steel sheet pile 
will be installed using a vibratory and/or impact hammer.
    The proposed AML pier will be a steel and concrete structure 
abutting the new wharf structure. The pier will be 65 by 30 feet, 
supported by twenty 36-inch-diameter steel piles. Finished height will 
be 30 feet above MLLW. Piles will be installed with a vibratory and/or 
impact hammer.
    The proposed AML ramp will be a steel ramp of 96 by 23 feet 
supported by four 48-inch-diameter steel guide piles and sixteen 24-
inch-diameter steel piles. Finished height will be 30 feet above MLLW. 
The ramp will be installed by crane.
    A new ore loader is proposed in the harbor, including a loader, 
foundation, and access platform. The proposed ore loader foundation 
will be a steel and concrete structure, 50 by 50 feet and supported by 
fifty 36-inch-diameter steel piles. Finished height will be 30 feet 
above MLLW. Piles will be installed with a vibratory and/or impact 
hammer.
    The proposed access platform will connect the ore loader to the Ore 
Terminal uplands. It will be a steel and concrete structure, 90 by 15 
feet, and supported by twenty 36-inch-diameter steel piles. Finished 
height will be 30 feet above MLLW. Only the eastern 40 feet of length 
and eight piles will be over the intertidal or subtidal zones (the 
remainder will be above and tied into the uplands). Piles will be 
installed with a vibratory and/or impact hammer.
    The concrete dock and seven moorage dolphins (see Section 2.2.4.5 
of the MOS's application) or up to 10 moorage dolphins will be 
installed depending on funding. A concrete floating dock is proposed 
for the southern end of the project area, including the dock, a 
transfer bridge, a pile-supported pedestrian platform, and a pedestrian 
gangway. The proposed floating dock will be a 300-by-50-foot concrete 
structure supported by seven 60-inch- diameter piles and fourteen 36-
inch-diameter piles. The finished height will vary with the tide; the 
dock will have approximately 7 feet of freeboard above the waterline. 
Piles will be installed with a vibratory and/or impact hammer.
    The proposed transfer bridge will be a 200-by-19-foot steel 
structure supported by a concrete abutment founded on ten 24-inch-
diameter piles placed above the intertidal zone. The top of the ramp 
will be 30 feet above MLLW and the bottom of the ramp will be supported 
by the floating dock. Only the eastern 150 feet of length will be over 
the intertidal or subtidal zones (the remainder will be above and tied 
into the uplands). The ramp will be installed by crane.
    The proposed pedestrian platform will be a 25-by-55-foot concrete 
structure, placed adjacent to the existing timber walkway that will 
remain after the ore dock demolition. Finished height will be 30 feet 
above MLLW. The pedestrian platform will be supported on six 24-inch-
diameter steel piles. Only the eastern 10 feet and three piles of this 
structure will be over the intertidal or subtidal zones (the remainder 
will be above and tied into the uplands).

[[Page 26633]]

    The proposed pedestrian gangway will be a 150-by-8-foot steel 
structure that spans between the pedestrian platform and the concrete 
floating dock. The top of the ramp will be 30 feet above MLLW and the 
bottom of the ramp will be supported by the floating dock. The full 
length of the pedestrian gangway will be over the intertidal or 
subtidal zones. It will be installed by crane.
    As many as 10 new moorage dolphins may be constructed, along with 
connecting catwalks, located as follows:
     Up to two dolphins and a catwalk 200 by 6 feet extending 
from the AML bulkhead wall toward the AML ramp;
     Up to five dolphins and a catwalk 400 by 6 feet extending 
north and south from the ore loader; and
     Up to three dolphins and a catwalk 300 by 6 feet north of 
the existing concrete pier, if the concrete floating dock is not 
constructed.
    Each dolphin will consist of a 15-foot-square steel and concrete 
superstructure atop ten 36-inch steel piles.
    Each catwalk will be a 6-foot-wide steel structure, supported by 
the dolphins. Finished height will be 30 feet above MLLW. Dolphins will 
be installed by vibratory and/or impact hammer and the catwalk will be 
installed by crane.
    A new fuel manifold and fuel lines will be constructed on a pier 
extending from the ore loader platform infrastructure. The proposed 
fuel pier will be a steel and concrete structure. The approach pier 
will be 60 by 15 feet, supported by eight 36-inch-diameter steel piles. 
The fuel pier will be 30 by 30 feet supported by nine 36-inch-diameter 
steel piles. Finished height will be 30 feet above MLLW. Piles will be 
installed with a vibratory and/or impact hammer.

Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of the Specified Activity

    Marine waters near Skagway in the Taiya inlet and the larger Lynn 
Canal support many species of marine mammals, including pinnipeds and 
cetaceans; however, the number of species that may regularly occur near 
the project area is 10 marine mammal species (Table 3). For the purpose 
of this IHA, the region of activity is defined as Taiya Inlet as 
acoustic impacts from the project are not anticipated to extend beyond 
the inlet into the adjacent Lynn Canal. Some species in this area are 
not expected to be impacted by the project activities, due to habitat 
preference including the gray whale, sperm whale, and the Pacific 
white-sided dolphin, and are therefore not considered further in this 
document after this section. Sperm whales have been observed in 
southeast Alaska with more frequency in recent years and have been 
tracked in Lynn Canal (seaswap.info). It is unknown whether they occur 
as far north as Taiya inlet and the action area (J. Moran personal 
communication, March 2016); however, there are no documented sightings 
in the area (seaswap.info). This species prefers deeper waters, and are 
unlikely to occur in the narrow inlets near Skagway. Gray whale 
sightings in the portion of Southeast Alaska are very rare; there have 
only been eight sightings since 1997, none of which were in Taiya Inlet 
or Lynn Canal. Pacific white-sided are also considered rare in the 
action area, with habitat preferences in southern waters of southeast 
Alaska. While minke whales may occur in the action area, our analysis 
and take calculation suggest that this species will not be taken for 
this activity (zero calculated take); therefore, no take of this 
species will be authorized. There are six marine mammal species 
documented in the waters of Taiya Inlet/Lynn Canal (Dahlheim et al. 
2009; Allen and Angliss 2014; Muto and Angliss 2015) for which take is 
requested.
    One of the species, the harbor seal, is known to consistently occur 
near the SOT; however the closest haul out site is six miles away. 
Moderate to high abundances of Steller sea lions are also known to 
seasonally occupy the inlet, with the closest haul out more than 22 
miles away from construction activities. Several humpback whales have 
been observed within Taiya Inlet, sometimes close to Skagway, during 
non-winter months. The remaining four species (harbor porpoise, Dall's 
porpoise, killer whale, and minke whale) may occur in Taiya Inlet/Lynn 
Canal, but less frequently and farther from the SOT.

                      Table 3--Marine Mammal Species Likely To Occur Near the Project Area
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     Stock(s)
         Species name               abundance           ESA * status        MMPA ** status        Occurrence
                                   estimate \1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      Order Cetartiodactyla--Cetacea--Superfamily Mysticeti (baleen whales)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             Family Balaenopteridae
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Humpback whale (Megaptera       Central North      Endangered............  Strategic,        Rare.
 novaeangliae).                  Pacific Stock:                             depleted.
                                 10,252.
Minke whale (Balaenoptera       Alaska stock: N/A  Not listed............  Not strategic...  Unlikely.
 acutorostrata).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   Order Cetartiodactyla--Cetacea--Superfamily
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              Family Eschrichtiidae
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gray whale (Eschrichtius        Eastern North      Not listed............  Not strategic,    Unlikely.
 robustus).                      Pacific stock:                             non-depleted.
                                 20,990.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   Order Cetartiodactyla--Cetacea--Superfamily
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              Family Physeteroidea
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sperm whale (Physeter           North Pacific      Endangered............  Strategic,        Unlikely.
 macrocephalus).                 stock: N/A.                                depleted.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 26634]]

 
                                   Order Cetartiodactyla--Cetacea--Superfamily
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                               Family Delphinidae
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Killer whale (Orcinus orca)...  Alaska stock:      Not listed............  Not Strategic,    Infrequent.
                                 2,347.                                     non-depleted.
                                Northern resident
                                 stock: 261.
                                Gulf of Alaska
                                 stock: 587.
                                West coast
                                 transient stock:
                                 243.
Pacific white-sided dolphin     North Pacific      Not listed............  Not Strategic,    Unlikely.
 (Lagenorhynchus obliquidens).   stock: 26,880.                             non-depleted.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   Order Cetartiodactyla--Cetacea--Superfamily
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                               Family Phocoenidae
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dall's porpoise (Phocoenoides   Alaska stock:      Not listed............  Not strategic,    Rare.
 dalli).                         83,400.                                    non-depleted.
Harbor porpoise (Phocoena       Southeast AK:      Not listed............  Strategic, non-   Likely.
 phocoena).                      11,146.                                    depleted.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           Order Carnivora--Pinnipedia
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Family Phocidae
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harbor seal (Phoca vitulina)..  Lynn Canal/        Not listed............  Not strategic-    Likely.
                                 Stephens Passage                           non-depleted.
                                 Stock: 9,478.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           Order Carnivora--Pinnipedia
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                Family Otariidae
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steller sea lion (Eumetopias    wDPS:49,497......  Endangered............  Strategic,        Likely.
 jubatus).                      eDPS: 60,131-                               depleted.
                                 74,448.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 2015 draft marine mammal Stock Assessment Reports at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/species.htm.
* Endangered Species Act.
** Marine Mammal Protection Act.

Cetaceans

Humpback whale
    The humpback whale is distributed worldwide in all ocean basins. In 
winter, most humpback whales occur in the subtropical and tropical 
waters of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, and migrate to high 
latitudes in the summer to feed. The historic summer feeding range of 
humpback whales in the North Pacific encompassed coastal and inland 
waters around the Pacific Rim from Point Conception, California, north 
to the Gulf of Alaska and the Bering Sea, and west along the Aleutian 
Islands to the Kamchatka Peninsula and into the Sea of Okhotsk and 
north of the Bering Strait (Zenkovich 1954, Johnson and Wolman 1984). 
The winter range includes the main islands of the Hawaiian archipelago, 
with the greatest concentration along the west side of Maui. In Mexico, 
the winter range includes waters around the southern part of the Baja 
California peninsula, the central portions of the Pacific coast of 
mainland Mexico, and the Revillagigedos Islands off the mainland coast. 
The winter range also extends from southern Mexico into Central 
America, including Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica 
(Calambokidis et al., 2008).
    There are three stocks of humpback whales in the North Pacific: (1) 
The California/Oregon/Washington and Mexico stock, consisting of 
winter/spring populations in coastal Central America and coastal Mexico 
which migrate to the coast of California to southern British Columbia 
in summer/fall (Calambokidis et al. 1989, Steiger et al. 1991, 
Calambokidis et al. 1993); (2) the central North Pacific stock, 
consisting of winter/spring populations of the Hawaiian Islands which 
migrate primarily to northern British Columbia/Southeast Alaska, the 
Gulf of Alaska, and the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands (Perry et al. 1990, 
Calambokidis et al. 1997); and (3) the western North Pacific stock, 
consisting of winter/spring populations off Asia which migrate 
primarily to Russia and the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands. Information 
from the SPLASH (Structure of Populations, Levels of Abundance, and 
Status of Humpbacks) project mostly confirms this view of humpback 
whale distribution and movements in the North Pacific; however, the 
full SPLASH results suggest the current view of population structure is 
incomplete. A revision of population structure in the North Pacific 
will be considered when the full genetic results from the SPLASH 
project are available. The central North Pacific stock is the only 
stock that is found near the project activities.
    The current abundance estimate for the Central North Pacific stock 
is 10,252 individuals (Muto and Angliss, 2015). This stock is 
designated as strategic and depleted under the MMPA. Humpback whales 
are currently listed as endangered range-wide under the ESA. The status 
and population structure of humpback whales is currently under review 
by NMFS as part of a global status review of the species (Muto and 
Angliss, 2015). This stock of humpback whales is growing, with the 
growth rate estimated to be seven percent (Allen and Angliss, 2014). 
The current PBR for this stock is 173 individuals. Entanglement from 
fishing gear and ship strikes remain the top threats for humpback 
whales, with an estimated

[[Page 26635]]

annual mortality and serious injury rate of 23 animals (Muto and 
Angliss, 2015).
Killer Whale
    Killer whales have been observed in all oceans and seas of the 
world, but the highest densities occur in colder and more productive 
waters found at high latitudes. Killer whales are found throughout the 
North Pacific, and occur along the entire Alaska coast, in British 
Columbia and Washington inland waterways, and along the outer coasts of 
Washington, Oregon, and California (Allen and Angliss, 2013).
    Based on data regarding association patterns, acoustics, movements, 
and genetic differences, eight killer whale stocks are now recognized: 
(1) The Alaska Resident stock; (2) the Northern Resident stock; (3) the 
Southern Resident stock; (4) the Gulf of Alaska, Aleutian Islands, and 
Bering Sea Transient stock; (5) the AT1 Transient stock; (6) the West 
Coast transient stock, occurring from California through southeastern 
Alaska; and (7) the Offshore stock, and (8) the Hawaiian stock. Only 
the Alaska resident; Northern resident; Gulf of Alaska, Aleutian 
Islands, and Bering Sea Transient (Gulf of Alaska transient); and the 
West coast transient stocks are considered in this application because 
other stocks occur outside the geographic area under consideration. Any 
of these four stocks could be seen in the action area; however, the 
Northern resident stock is most likely to occur in the area.
    The Alaska resident stock is found from southeastern Alaska to the 
Aleutian Islands and Bering Sea. Intermixing of Alaska residents have 
been documented among the three areas, at least as far west as the 
eastern Aleutian Islands (Allen and Angliss, 2013). Combining the 
counts of known `resident' whales gives a minimum number of 2,347 
(Southeast Alaska + Prince William Sound + Western Alaska; 121 + 751 + 
1,475) killer whales belonging to the Alaska Resident stock (Allen and 
Angliss 2013). At present, reliable data on trends in population 
abundance for the entire Alaska resident stock of killer whales are 
unavailable. PBR is 23.4 animals. Fishery interactions are a main 
threat to this stock. This stock is not designated as depleted or 
classified as strategic under the MMPA, and is not listed under the 
ESA.
    The Northern resident stock occurs from Washington State through 
part of southeastern Alaska. The Northern Resident stock is a 
transboundary stock, and includes killer whales that frequent British 
Columbia, Canada and southeastern Alaska (Dahlheim et al., 1997; Ford 
et al., 2000). The population estimate for this stock is currently 261 
whales (Allen and Angliss, 2013). This population is increasing, with 
an average of 2.1 percent annual increase over a 36 year time period 
(Ellis et al., 2011). PBR for this stock is 1.96 animals. This stock is 
not designated as depleted or strategic under the MMPA, and is not 
listed as threatened or endangered under the ESA.
    The Gulf of Alaska transient stock occurs mainly from Prince 
William Sound through the Aleutian Islands and Bering Sea. Current 
abundance estimate for this stock is 587 animals (Allen and Angliss, 
2013). PBR is 5.87 animals per year (Allen and Angliss, 2013). Current 
trends for this stock are unavailable, but the stock is not designated 
as depleted or strategic under the MMPA and is not listed under the 
ESA.
    The West coast transient stock includes animals that occur in 
California, Oregon, Washington, British Columbia and southeastern 
Alaska. Current abundance estimate for this stock is 243 animals, which 
should be considered a minimum count for this stock (Allen and Angliss, 
2013). PBR is 2.4 animals per year (Allen and Angliss, 2013). No 
reliable estimates of population trends are available, but this stock 
is not designated as depleted or strategic under the MMPA, and is not 
listed under the ESA.
    Additional information on the biology and local distribution of 
these species can be found in the NMFS Marine Mammal Stock Assessment 
Reports, which may be found at: http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/.
Dall's Porpoise
    Dall's porpoise are widely distributed across the entire North 
Pacific Ocean. They are found over the continental shelf adjacent to 
the slope and over deep (2,500+ m) oceanic waters. They have been 
sighted throughout the North Pacific as far north as 65[deg] N. 
(Buckland et al. 1993). Throughout most of the eastern North Pacific 
they are present during all months of the year, although there may be 
seasonal onshore-offshore movements along the west coast of the 
continental United States (Loeb 1972), and winter movements of 
populations out of Prince William Sound and areas in the Gulf of Alaska 
and Bering Sea (NMFS, unpubl. data, National Marine Mammal Laboratory). 
The stock structure of eastern North Pacific Dall's porpoise is not 
adequately understood at this time, but based on patterns of stock 
differentiation in the western North Pacific, where they have been more 
intensively studied, it is expected that separate stocks will emerge 
when data become available.
    Currently one stock of Dall's porpoise is recognized in Alaskan 
waters, while Dall's porpoise along the west coast of the continental 
U.S. from California to Washington comprise a separate stock (Allen and 
Angliss, 2012). The current abundance estimate for the Alaska stock is 
83,400 animals (Muto and Angliss, 2015). PBR for this stock is 
currently undetermined, and population trends are unknown; however, 
this stock is not designated as depleted or strategic under the MMPA, 
and is not listed under the ESA (Allen and Angliss, 2012).
Harbor Porpoise
    The harbor porpoise inhabits temporal, subarctic, and arctic 
waters. In the eastern North Pacific, harbor porpoises range from Point 
Barrow, Alaska, to Point Conception, California. Harbor porpoise 
primarily frequent coastal waters and occur most frequently in waters 
less than 100 m deep (Hobbs and Waite 2010). They may occasionally be 
found in deeper offshore waters.
    In Alaska, harbor porpoises are currently divided into three 
stocks, based primarily on geography. These are (1) the Southeast 
Alaska stock--occurring from the northern border of British Columbia to 
Cape Suckling, Alaska, (2) the Gulf of Alaska stock--occurring from 
Cape Suckling to Unimak Pass, and (3) the Bering Sea stock--occurring 
throughout the Aleutian Islands and all waters north of Unimak Pass 
(Allen and Angliss 2014). Only the Southeast Alaska stock is considered 
in this application because the other stocks are not found in the 
geographic area under consideration.
    Harbor porpoises are neither designated as depleted under the MMPA 
nor listed as threatened or endangered under the ESA. Because the most 
recent abundance estimate is 14 years old and information on incidental 
harbor porpoise mortality in commercial fisheries is not well 
understood, the Southeast Alaska stock of harbor porpoise is classified 
as strategic. Population trends and status of this stock relative to 
optimum sustainable population size are currently unknown. The 
Southeast Alaska stock is currently estimated at 11,146 individuals 
(Muto and Angliss 2015). No reliable information is available to 
determine trends in abundance.

[[Page 26636]]

Pinnipeds

Harbor Seal
    Harbor seals range from Baja California north along the west coasts 
of Washington, Oregon, California, British Columbia, and Southeast 
Alaska; west through the Gulf of Alaska, Prince William Sound, and the 
Aleutian Islands; and north in the Bering Sea to Cape Newenham and the 
Pribilof Islands. They haul out on rocks, reefs, beaches, and drifting 
glacial ice, and feed in marine, estuarine, and occasionally fresh 
waters. Harbor seals generally are nonmigratory, with local movements 
associated with such factors as tides, weather, season, food 
availability, and reproduction (Scheffer and Slipp 1944, Fisher 1952, 
Bigg 1969, 1981, Hastings et al. 2004).
    In 2010, harbor seals in Alaska were partitioned into 12 separate 
stocks based largely on genetic structure (Allen and Angliss 2012). The 
12 stocks of harbor seals identified in Alaska are (1) the Aleutian 
Islands stock, (2) the Pribilof Islands stock, (3) the Bristol Bay 
stock, (4) the North Kodiak stock, (5) the South Kodiak stock, (6) the 
Prince William Sound stock, (7) the Cook Inlet/Shelikof stock, (8) the 
Glacier Bay/Icy Strait stock, (9) the Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage 
stock, (10) the Sitka/Chatham stock, (11) the Dixon/Cape Decision 
stock, and (12) the Clarence Strait stock. Only the Lynn Canal/Stephens 
stock is considered for these construction activities. The range of 
this stock ranges north along the east and north coast of Admiralty 
Island from the north end of Kupreanof Island through Lynn Canal, 
including Taku Inlet, Tracy Arm, and Endicott Arm, and reaching as far 
north as Taiya, Lutak, and Chilkat Inlets (Allen and Angliss, 2012).
    The current statewide abundance estimate for Alaskan harbor seals 
is 205,090, based on aerial survey data collected during 1998-2011 
(Muto and Angliss, 2015). The abundance estimate for the Lynn Canal/
Stephens Passage stock is 9,478 (Muto and Angliss 2015). The current 
(2007-2011) estimate of the population trend information for this stock 
is -176 seals per year, with a probability that the stock is decreasing 
(Muto and Angliss, 2015). PBR is 155 animals per year.
    Harbor seals are included in subsistence harvests. From 2011-2012, 
an average of 50 animals from this stock were harvested each year, 
which is higher than previous estimates of 30 animals, on average, per 
year from 2004-2008 (Muto and Angliss, 2015). Entanglement is the 
biggest contributor to their annual human-caused mortality. Lynn Canal/
Stephens Passage harbor seals are not listed as depleted or strategic 
under the MMPA, and are not listed under the ESA.
Steller Sea Lion
    The Steller sea lion is a pinniped and the largest of the eared 
seals. Steller sea lion populations that primarily occur west of 
144[deg] W. (Cape Suckling, Alaska) comprise the western Distinct 
Population Segment (wDPS), while all others comprise the eastern DPS 
(eDPS); however, there is regular movement of both DPSs across this 
boundary (Muto and Angliss, 2015). Both of these populations may occur 
in the action area. Steller sea lions were listed as threatened range-
wide under the ESA on 26 November 1990 (55 Federal Register [FR] 
49204). Steller sea lions were subsequently partitioned into the 
western and eastern DPSs in 1997 (Allen and Angliss 2010), with the 
wDPS being listed as endangered under the ESA and the eDPS remaining 
classified as threatened (62 FR 24345) until it was delisted in 
November 2013. In August 1993, NMFS published a final rule designating 
critical habitat for the Steller sea lion as a 20 nautical mile buffer 
around all major haul-outs and rookeries, as well as associated 
terrestrial, air and aquatic zones, and three large offshore foraging 
areas (50 CFR 226.202). There is no Steller sea lion critical habitat 
in the area.
    The range of the Steller sea lion includes the North Pacific Ocean 
rim from California to northern Japan, with centers of abundance and 
distribution in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands (Muto and 
Angliss, 2015). Steller sea lions forage in nearshore and pelagic 
waters where they are opportunistic predators. They feed primarily on a 
wide variety of fishes and cephalopods. Steller sea lions use 
terrestrial haulout sites to rest and take refuge. They also gather on 
well-defined, traditionally used rookeries to pup and breed. These 
habitats are typically gravel, rocky, or sand beaches; ledges; or rocky 
reefs (Allen and Angliss, 2013).
    The current abundance estimate for the wDPS in Alaska is 49,497 sea 
lions, and between 60,131-74,448 animals for the eDPS (Muto and Angliss 
2015). The wDPS of Steller sea lions declined approximately 75 percent 
from 1976 to 1990. Factors that may have contributed to this decline 
include (1) incidental take in fisheries, (2) legal and illegal 
shooting, (3) predation, (4) contaminants, (5) disease, and (6) climate 
change. Non-pup Steller sea lion counts at trend sites in the wDPS 
increased 11 percent during 2000-2004. These counts were the first 
region-wide increases for the wDPS since standardized surveys began in 
the 1970s, and were due to increased or stable counts in all regions 
except the western Aleutian Islands. During 2004-2008, western Alaska 
non-pup counts increased only 3 percent; eastern Gulf of Alaska (Prince 
William Sound area) counts were higher; counts from the Kenai Peninsula 
through Kiska Island, including Kodiak Island, were stable; and western 
Aleutian counts continued to decline (Allen and Angliss 2010). Current 
PBR for the wDPS is 297 animals, and PBR for the eDPS is currently 
unavailable (Muto and Angliss, 2015).
    Steller sea lions are included in Alaska subsistence harvests. The 
mean annual take of Steller sea lions is 199 from 2004-2013 (Muto and 
Angliss, 2015). Entanglements in fishing gear and marine debris, and 
interactions with fishing gear are sources of mortality and serious 
injury for Steller sea lions.

Potential Effects of the Specified Activity on Marine Mammals and Their 
Habitat

    This section includes a summary and discussion of the ways that the 
specified activity (e.g. pile driving, pile removal), including 
potential mitigation activities, associated with the reconstruction of 
the SOT may impact marine mammals and their habitat. Mitigation 
measures will reduce impacts to marine mammals from the project 
activities. Please refer to the Proposed Mitigation section for more 
information. The Estimated Take by Incidental Harassment section later 
in this document will include an analysis of the number of individuals 
that are expected to be taken by this activity. The Negligible Impact 
Analysis section will include the analysis of how this specific 
activity will impact marine mammals and will consider the content of 
this section, the Estimated Take by Incidental Harassment section, and 
the Proposed Mitigation section to draw conclusions regarding the 
likely impacts of this activity on the reproductive success or 
survivorship of individuals and from that on the affected marine mammal 
populations or stocks. In the following discussion, we provide general 
background information on sound and marine mammal hearing before 
considering potential effects to marine mammals from sound produced by 
pile extraction, vibratory pile driving, and impact pile driving.

Description of Sound Sources

    Sound travels in waves, the basic components of which are 
frequency, wavelength, velocity, and amplitude. Frequency is the number 
of pressure

[[Page 26637]]

waves that pass by a reference point per unit of time and is measured 
in hertz (Hz) or cycles per second. Wavelength is the distance between 
two peaks of a sound wave; lower frequency sounds have longer 
wavelengths than higher frequency sounds and attenuate (decrease) more 
rapidly in shallower water. Amplitude is the height of the sound 
pressure wave or the `loudness' of a sound and is typically measured 
using the decibel (dB) scale. A dB is the ratio between a measured 
pressure (with sound) and a reference pressure (sound at a constant 
pressure, established by scientific standards). It is a logarithmic 
unit that accounts for large variations in amplitude; therefore, 
relatively small changes in dB ratings correspond to large changes in 
sound pressure. When referring to sound pressure levels (SPLs; the 
sound force per unit area), sound is referenced in the context of 
underwater sound pressure to 1 microPascal ([mu]Pa). One pascal is the 
pressure resulting from a force of one newton exerted over an area of 
one square meter. The source level (SL) represents the sound level at a 
distance of 1 m from the source (referenced to 1 [mu]Pa). The received 
level is the sound level at the listener's position. Note that all 
underwater sound levels in this document are referenced to a pressure 
of 1 [mu]Pa and all airborne sound levels in this document are 
referenced to a pressure of 20 [mu]Pa.
    Root mean square (rms) is the quadratic mean sound pressure over 
the duration of an impulse. Rms is calculated by squaring all of the 
sound amplitudes, averaging the squares, and then taking the square 
root of the average (Urick, 1983). Rms accounts for both positive and 
negative values; squaring the pressures makes all values positive so 
that they may be accounted for in the summation of pressure levels 
(Hastings and Popper, 2005). This measurement is often used in the 
context of discussing behavioral effects, in part because behavioral 
effects, which often result from auditory cues, may be better expressed 
through averaged units than by peak pressures.
    When underwater objects vibrate or activity occurs, sound-pressure 
waves are created. These waves alternately compress and decompress the 
water as the sound wave travels. Underwater sound waves radiate in all 
directions away from the source (similar to ripples on the surface of a 
pond), except in cases where the source is directional. The 
compressions and decompressions associated with sound waves are 
detected as changes in pressure by aquatic life and man-made sound 
receptors such as hydrophones.
    Even in the absence of sound from the specified activity, the 
underwater environment is typically loud due to ambient sound. Ambient 
sound is defined as environmental background sound levels lacking a 
single source or point (Richardson et al., 1995), and the sound level 
of a region is defined by the total acoustical energy being generated 
by known and unknown sources. These sources may include physical (e.g., 
waves, earthquakes, ice, atmospheric sound), biological (e.g., sounds 
produced by marine mammals, fish, and invertebrates), and anthropogenic 
sound (e.g., vessels, dredging, aircraft, construction). A number of 
sources contribute to ambient sound, including the following 
(Richardson et al., 1995):
     Wind and waves: The complex interactions between wind and 
water surface, including processes such as breaking waves and wave-
induced bubble oscillations and cavitation, are a main source of 
naturally occurring ambient noise for frequencies between 200 Hz and 50 
kHz (Mitson, 1995). In general, ambient sound levels tend to increase 
with increasing wind speed and wave height. Surf noise becomes 
important near shore, with measurements collected at a distance of 8.5 
km from shore showing an increase of 10 dB in the 100 to 700 Hz band 
during heavy surf conditions.
     Precipitation: Sound from rain and hail impacting the 
water surface can become an important component of total noise at 
frequencies above 500 Hz, and possibly down to 100 Hz during quiet 
times.
     Biological: Marine mammals can contribute significantly to 
ambient noise levels, as can some fish and shrimp. The frequency band 
for biological contributions is from approximately 12 Hz to over 100 
kHz.
     Anthropogenic: Sources of ambient noise related to human 
activity include transportation (surface vessels and aircraft), 
dredging and construction, oil and gas drilling and production, seismic 
surveys, sonar, explosions, and ocean acoustic studies. Shipping noise 
typically dominates the total ambient noise for frequencies between 20 
and 300 Hz. In general, the frequencies of anthropogenic sounds are 
below 1 kHz and, if higher frequency sound levels are created, they 
attenuate rapidly (Richardson et al., 1995). Sound from identifiable 
anthropogenic sources other than the activity of interest (e.g., a 
passing vessel) is sometimes termed background sound, as opposed to 
ambient sound.
    The sum of the various natural and anthropogenic sound sources at 
any given location and time--which comprise ``ambient'' or 
``background'' sound--depends not only on the source levels (as 
determined by current weather conditions and levels of biological and 
shipping activity) but also on the ability of sound to propagate 
through the environment. In turn, sound propagation is dependent on the 
spatially and temporally varying properties of the water column and sea 
floor, and is frequency-dependent. As a result of the dependence on a 
large number of varying factors, ambient sound levels can be expected 
to vary widely over both coarse and fine spatial and temporal scales. 
Sound levels at a given frequency and location can vary by 10-20 dB 
from day to day (Richardson et al., 1995). The result is that, 
depending on the source type and its intensity, sound from the 
specified activity may be a negligible addition to the local 
environment or could form a distinctive signal that may affect marine 
mammals.
    The underwater acoustic environment in the SOT is likely to be 
dominated by noise from day-to-day port and vessel activities. The Port 
of Skagway has provided key transportation import/export capacity for 
the Yukon and pier access accommodates vessels in the 35,000 DWT class 
(AIDEA 2008). When underway, these sources can create noise between 20 
Hz and 16 kHz (Lesage et al., 1999), with broadband noise levels up to 
180 dB. While there are no current measurements of ambient noise levels 
in harbor, it is likely that levels within the harbor periodically 
exceed the 120 dB threshold and, therefore, that the high levels of 
anthropogenic activity in the basin create an environment far different 
from quieter habitats where behavioral reactions to sounds around the 
120 dB threshold have been observed (e.g., Malme et al., 1984, 1987).
    High levels of vessel traffic are known to elevate background 
levels of noise in the marine environment. For example, continuous 
sounds for tugs pulling barges have been reported to range from 145 to 
166 dB re 1 [mu]Pa rms at 1 meter from the source (Miles et al. 1987; 
Richardson et al. 1995; Simmonds et al. 2004). Ambient underwater noise 
levels in the SOT project area are both variable and relatively high, 
and are expected to mask some sounds of drilling, pile installation, 
and pile extraction.
    In-water construction activities associated with the project 
include vibratory pile driving and removal, and impact pile driving. 
There are two general categories of sound types: Impulse and non-pulse 
(defined below). Vibratory pile driving is considered to be continuous 
or non-pulsed while

[[Page 26638]]

impact pile driving is considered to be an impulse or pulsed sound 
type. The distinction between these two sound types is important 
because they have differing potential to cause physical effects, 
particularly with regard to hearing (e.g., Ward, 1997 in Southall et 
al., 2007). Please see Southall et al., (2007) for an in-depth 
discussion of these concepts.
    Pulsed sound sources (e.g., explosions, gunshots, sonic booms, 
impact pile driving) produce signals that are brief (typically 
considered to be less than one second), broadband, atonal transients 
(ANSI, 1986; Harris, 1998; NIOSH, 1998; ISO, 2003; ANSI, 2005) and 
occur either as isolated events or repeated in some succession. Pulsed 
sounds are all characterized by a relatively rapid rise from ambient 
pressure to a maximal pressure value followed by a rapid decay period 
that may include a period of diminishing, oscillating maximal and 
minimal pressures, and generally have an increased capacity to induce 
physical injury as compared with sounds that lack these features.
    Non-pulsed sounds can be tonal, narrowband, or broadband, brief or 
prolonged, and may be either continuous or non-continuous (NIOSH, 
1998). Some of these non-pulsed sounds can be transient signals of 
short duration but without the essential properties of pulses (e.g., 
rapid rise time). Examples of non-pulsed sounds include those produced 
by vessels, aircraft, machinery operations such as drilling or 
dredging, vibratory pile driving, and active sonar systems (such as 
those used by the U.S. Navy). The duration of such sounds, as received 
at a distance, can be greatly extended in a highly reverberant 
environment.
    Impact hammers operate by repeatedly dropping a heavy piston onto a 
pile to drive the pile into the substrate. Sound generated by impact 
hammers is characterized by rapid rise times and high peak levels, a 
potentially injurious combination (Hastings and Popper, 2005). 
Vibratory hammers install piles by vibrating them and allowing the 
weight of the hammer to push them into the sediment. Vibratory hammers 
produce significantly less sound than impact hammers. Peak SPLs may be 
180 dB or greater, but are generally 10 to 20 dB lower than SPLs 
generated during impact pile driving of the same-sized pile (Oestman et 
al., 2009). Rise time is slower, reducing the probability and severity 
of injury, and sound energy is distributed over a greater amount of 
time (Nedwell and Edwards, 2002; Carlson et al., 2005).
    The likely or possible impacts of the proposed pile driving program 
at SOT on marine mammals could involve both non-acoustic and acoustic 
stressors. Potential non-acoustic stressors could result from the 
physical presence of the equipment and personnel. Any impacts to marine 
mammals are expected to primarily be acoustic in nature. Acoustic 
stressors could include effects of heavy equipment operation, pile 
installation and pile removal at SOT.

Marine Mammal Hearing

    Hearing is the most important sensory modality for marine mammals, 
and exposure to sound can have deleterious effects. To appropriately 
assess these potential effects, it is necessary to understand the 
frequency ranges marine mammals are able to hear. Current data indicate 
that not all marine mammal species have equal hearing capabilities 
(e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok and Ketten, 1999; Au and 
Hastings, 2008). To reflect this, Southall et al. (2007) recommended 
that marine mammals be divided into functional hearing groups based on 
measured or estimated hearing ranges on the basis of available 
behavioral data, audiograms derived using auditory evoked potential 
techniques, anatomical modeling, and other data. The lower and/or upper 
frequencies for some of these functional hearing groups have been 
modified from those designated by Southall et al. (2007). The 
functional groups and the associated frequencies are indicated below 
(note that these frequency ranges do not necessarily correspond to the 
range of best hearing, which varies by species):
     Low frequency cetaceans (13 species of mysticetes): 
Functional hearing is estimated to occur between approximately 7 Hz and 
25 kHz (up to 30 kHz in some species), with best hearing estimated to 
be from 100 Hz to 8 kHz (Watkins, 1986; Ketten, 1998; Houser et al., 
2001; Au et al., 2006; Lucifredi and Stein, 2007; Ketten et al., 2007; 
Parks et al., 2007a; Ketten and Mountain, 2009; Tubelli et al., 2012);
     Mid-frequency cetaceans (32 species of dolphins, six 
species of larger toothed whales, and 19 species of beaked and 
bottlenose whales): Functional hearing is estimated to occur between 
approximately 150 Hz and 160 kHz with best hearing from 10 to less than 
100 kHz (Johnson, 1967; White, 1977; Richardson et al., 1995; Szymanski 
et al., 1999; Kastelein et al., 2003; Finneran et al., 2005a, 2009; 
Nachtigall et al., 2005, 2008; Yuen et al., 2005; Popov et al., 2007; 
Au and Hastings, 2008; Houser et al., 2008; Pacini et al., 2010, 2011; 
Schlundt et al., 2011);
     High frequency cetaceans (eight species of true porpoises, 
six species of river dolphins, and members of the genera Kogia and 
Cephalorhynchus; now considered to include two members of the genus 
Lagenorhynchus on the basis of recent echolocation data and genetic 
data [May-Collado and Agnarsson, 2006; Kyhn et al. 2009, 2010; Tougaard 
et al. 2010]): Functional hearing is estimated to occur between 
approximately 200 Hz and 180 kHz (Popov and Supin, 1990a,b; Kastelein 
et al., 2002; Popov et al., 2005);
     Phocid pinnipeds in water: Functional hearing is estimated 
to occur between approximately 75 Hz and 100 kHz with best hearing 
between 1-50 kHz (M[oslash]hl, 1968; Terhune and Ronald, 1971, 1972; 
Richardson et al., 1995; Kastak and Schusterman, 1999; Reichmuth, 2008; 
Kastelein et al., 2009); and
     Otariid pinnipeds in water: Functional hearing is 
estimated to occur between approximately 100 Hz and 48 kHz, with best 
hearing between 2-48 kHz (Schusterman et al., 1972; Moore and 
Schusterman, 1987; Babushina et al., 1991; Richardson et al., 1995; 
Kastak and Schusterman, 1998; Kastelein et al., 2005a; Mulsow and 
Reichmuth, 2007; Mulsow et al., 2011a, b).
    The pinniped functional hearing group was modified from Southall et 
al. (2007) on the basis of data indicating that phocid species have 
consistently demonstrated an extended frequency range of hearing 
compared to otariids, especially in the higher frequency range 
(Hemil[auml] et al., 2006; Kastelein et al., 2009; Reichmuth et al., 
2013).
    As mentioned previously in this document, ten marine mammal species 
(eight cetaceans and two pinnipeds) may occur in the project area. Of 
the six species likely to occur in the proposed project area for which 
take is requested, one is classified as a low-frequency cetacean (i.e. 
humpback whale), one is classified as a mid-frequency cetacean (i.e., 
killer whale), and two are classified as a high-frequency cetaceans 
(i.e., harbor porpoise and Dall's porpoise) (Southall et al., 2007). 
Additionally, harbor seals are classified as members of the phocid 
pinnipeds in water functional hearing group while Stellar sea lions are 
grouped under the Otariid pinnipeds in water functional hearing group. 
A species' functional hearing group is a consideration when we analyze 
the effects of exposure to sound on marine mammals.

[[Page 26639]]

Acoustic Impacts

    Please refer to the information given previously (Description of 
Sound Sources) regarding sound, characteristics of sound types, and 
metrics used in this document. Anthropogenic sounds cover a broad range 
of frequencies and sound levels and can have a range of highly variable 
impacts on marine life, from none or minor to potentially severe 
responses, depending on received levels, duration of exposure, 
behavioral context, and various other factors. The potential effects of 
underwater sound from active acoustic sources can potentially result in 
one or more of the following: Temporary or permanent hearing 
impairment, non-auditory physical or physiological effects, behavioral 
disturbance, stress, and masking (Richardson et al., 1995; Gordon et 
al., 2004; Nowacek et al., 2007; Southall et al., 2007; Gotz et al., 
2009). The degree of effect is intrinsically related to the signal 
characteristics, received level, distance from the source, and duration 
of the sound exposure. In general, sudden, high level sounds can cause 
hearing loss, as can longer exposures to lower level sounds. Temporary 
or permanent loss of hearing will occur almost exclusively for noise 
within an animal's hearing range. We first describe specific 
manifestations of acoustic effects before providing discussion specific 
to the MOS's construction activities.
    Richardson et al. (1995) described zones of increasing intensity of 
effect that might be expected to occur, in relation to distance from a 
source and assuming that the signal is within an animal's hearing 
range. First is the area within which the acoustic signal would be 
audible (potentially perceived) to the animal, but not strong enough to 
elicit any overt behavioral or physiological response. The next zone 
corresponds with the area where the signal is audible to the animal and 
of sufficient intensity to elicit behavioral or physiological 
responsiveness. Third is a zone within which, for signals of high 
intensity, the received level is sufficient to potentially cause 
discomfort or tissue damage to auditory or other systems. Overlaying 
these zones to a certain extent is the area within which masking (i.e., 
when a sound interferes with or masks the ability of an animal to 
detect a signal of interest that is above the absolute hearing 
threshold) may occur; the masking zone may be highly variable in size.
    We describe the more severe effects (i.e., permanent hearing 
impairment, certain non-auditory physical or physiological effects) 
only briefly as we do not expect that there is a reasonable likelihood 
that the MOS's activities may result in such effects (see below for 
further discussion). Marine mammals exposed to high-intensity sound, or 
to lower-intensity sound for prolonged periods, can experience hearing 
threshold shift (TS), which is the loss of hearing sensitivity at 
certain frequency ranges (Kastak et al., 1999; Schlundt et al., 2000; 
Finneran et al., 2002, 2005b). TS can be permanent (PTS), in which case 
the loss of hearing sensitivity is not fully recoverable, or temporary 
(TTS), in which case the animal's hearing threshold would recover over 
time (Southall et al., 2007). Repeated sound exposure that leads to TTS 
could cause PTS. In severe cases of PTS, there can be total or partial 
deafness, while in most cases the animal has an impaired ability to 
hear sounds in specific frequency ranges (Kryter, 1985).
    When PTS occurs, there is physical damage to the sound receptors in 
the ear (i.e., tissue damage), whereas TTS represents primarily tissue 
fatigue and is reversible (Southall et al., 2007). In addition, other 
investigators have suggested that TTS is within the normal bounds of 
physiological variability and tolerance and does not represent physical 
injury (e.g., Ward, 1997). Therefore, NMFS does not consider TTS to 
constitute auditory injury.
    Relationships between TTS and PTS thresholds have not been studied 
in marine mammals--PTS data exists only for a single harbor seal 
(Kastak et al., 2008)--but are assumed to be similar to those in humans 
and other terrestrial mammals. PTS typically occurs at exposure levels 
at least several decibels above (a 40-dB threshold shift approximates 
PTS onset; e.g., Kryter et al., 1966; Miller, 1974) that inducing mild 
TTS (a 6-dB threshold shift approximates TTS onset; e.g., Southall et 
al. 2007). Based on data from terrestrial mammals, a precautionary 
assumption is that the PTS thresholds for impulse sounds (such as 
impact pile driving pulses as received close to the source) are at 
least 6 dB higher than the TTS threshold on a peak-pressure basis and 
PTS cumulative sound exposure level thresholds are 15 to 20 dB higher 
than TTS cumulative sound exposure level thresholds (Southall et al., 
2007). Given the higher level of sound or longer exposure duration 
necessary to cause PTS as compared with TTS, it is considerably less 
likely that PTS could occur.
    Non-auditory physiological effects or injuries that theoretically 
might occur in marine mammals exposed to high level underwater sound or 
as a secondary effect of extreme behavioral reactions (e.g., change in 
dive profile as a result of an avoidance reaction) caused by exposure 
to sound include neurological effects, bubble formation, resonance 
effects, and other types of organ or tissue damage (Cox et al., 2006; 
Southall et al., 2007; Zimmer and Tyack, 2007). The MOS's activities do 
not involve the use of devices such as explosives or mid-frequency 
active sonar that are associated with these types of effects.
    When a live or dead marine mammal swims or floats onto shore and is 
incapable of returning to sea, the event is termed a ``stranding'' (16 
U.S.C. 1421h(3)). Marine mammals are known to strand for a variety of 
reasons, such as infectious agents, biotoxicosis, starvation, fishery 
interaction, ship strike, unusual oceanographic or weather events, 
sound exposure, or combinations of these stressors sustained 
concurrently or in series (e.g., Geraci et al., 1999). However, the 
cause or causes of most strandings are unknown (e.g., Best, 1982). 
Combinations of dissimilar stressors may combine to kill an animal or 
dramatically reduce its fitness, even though one exposure without the 
other would not be expected to produce the same outcome (e.g., Sih et 
al., 2004). For further description of stranding events see, e.g., 
Southall et al., 2006; Jepson et al., 2013; Wright et al., 2013.
    1. Temporary threshold shift--TTS is the mildest form of hearing 
impairment that can occur during exposure to sound (Kryter, 1985). 
While experiencing TTS, the hearing threshold rises, and a sound must 
be at a higher level in order to be heard. In terrestrial and marine 
mammals, TTS can last from minutes or hours to days (in cases of strong 
TTS). In many cases, hearing sensitivity recovers rapidly after 
exposure to the sound ends. Few data on sound levels and durations 
necessary to elicit mild TTS have been obtained for marine mammals, and 
none of the data published at the time of this writing concern TTS 
elicited by exposure to multiple pulses of sound.
    Marine mammal hearing plays a critical role in communication with 
conspecifics, and interpretation of environmental cues for purposes 
such as predator avoidance and prey capture. Depending on the degree 
(elevation of threshold in dB), duration (i.e., recovery time), and 
frequency range of TTS, and the context in which it is experienced, TTS 
can have effects on marine mammals ranging from discountable to 
serious. For example, a marine mammal may be able to readily compensate 
for a brief, relatively small amount of TTS in a non-critical frequency 
range that

[[Page 26640]]

occurs during a time where ambient noise is lower and there are not as 
many competing sounds present. Alternatively, a larger amount and 
longer duration of TTS sustained during time when communication is 
critical for successful mother/calf interactions could have more 
serious impacts.
    Currently, TTS data only exist for four species of cetaceans 
(bottlenose dolphin [Tursiops truncatus], beluga whale [Delphinapterus 
leucas], harbor porpoise, and Yangtze finless porpoise [Neophocoena 
asiaeorientalis]) and three species of pinnipeds (northern elephant 
seal, harbor seal, and California sea lion) exposed to a limited number 
of sound sources (i.e., mostly tones and octave-band noise) in 
laboratory settings (e.g., Finneran et al., 2002; Nachtigall et al., 
2004; Kastak et al., 2005; Lucke et al., 2009; Popov et al., 2011). In 
general, harbor seals (Kastak et al., 2005; Kastelein et al., 2012a) 
and harbor porpoises (Lucke et al., 2009; Kastelein et al., 2012b) have 
a lower TTS onset than other measured pinniped or cetacean species. 
Additionally, the existing marine mammal TTS data come from a limited 
number of individuals within these species. There are no data available 
on noise-induced hearing loss for mysticetes. For summaries of data on 
TTS in marine mammals or for further discussion of TTS onset 
thresholds, please see Southall et al. (2007) and Finneran and Jenkins 
(2012).
    2. Behavioral effects--Behavioral disturbance may include a variety 
of effects, including subtle changes in behavior (e.g., minor or brief 
avoidance of an area or changes in vocalizations), more conspicuous 
changes in similar behavioral activities, and more sustained and/or 
potentially severe reactions, such as displacement from or abandonment 
of high-quality habitat. Behavioral responses to sound are highly 
variable and context-specific and any reactions depend on numerous 
intrinsic and extrinsic factors (e.g., species, state of maturity, 
experience, current activity, reproductive state, auditory sensitivity, 
time of day), as well as the interplay between factors (e.g., 
Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok et al., 2003; Southall et al., 2007; 
Weilgart, 2007; Archer et al., 2010). Behavioral reactions can vary not 
only among individuals but also within an individual, depending on 
previous experience with a sound source, context, and numerous other 
factors (Ellison et al., 2012), and can vary depending on 
characteristics associated with the sound source (e.g., whether it is 
moving or stationary, number of sources, distance from the source). 
Please see Appendices B-C of Southall et al. (2007) for a review of 
studies involving marine mammal behavioral responses to sound.
    Habituation can occur when an animal's response to a stimulus wanes 
with repeated exposure, usually in the absence of unpleasant associated 
events (Wartzok et al., 2003). Animals are most likely to habituate to 
sounds that are predictable and unvarying. It is important to note that 
habituation is appropriately considered as a ``progressive reduction in 
response to stimuli that are perceived as neither aversive nor 
beneficial,'' rather than as, more generally, moderation in response to 
human disturbance (Bejder et al., 2009). The opposite process is 
sensitization, when an unpleasant experience leads to subsequent 
responses, often in the form of avoidance, at a lower level of 
exposure. As noted, behavioral state may affect the type of response. 
For example, animals that are resting may show greater behavioral 
change in response to disturbing sound levels than animals that are 
highly motivated to remain in an area for feeding (Richardson et al., 
1995; NRC, 2003; Wartzok et al., 2003). Controlled experiments with 
captive marine mammals have showed pronounced behavioral reactions, 
including avoidance of loud sound sources (Ridgway et al., 1997; 
Finneran et al., 2003). Observed responses of wild marine mammals to 
loud pulsed sound sources (typically seismic airguns or acoustic 
harassment devices) have been varied but often consist of avoidance 
behavior or other behavioral changes suggesting discomfort (Morton and 
Symonds, 2002; see also Richardson et al., 1995; Nowacek et al., 2007).
    Available studies show wide variation in response to underwater 
sound; therefore, it is difficult to predict specifically how any given 
sound in a particular instance might affect marine mammals perceiving 
the signal. If a marine mammal does react briefly to an underwater 
sound by changing its behavior or moving a small distance, the impacts 
of the change are unlikely to be significant to the individual, let 
alone the stock or population. However, if a sound source displaces 
marine mammals from an important feeding or breeding area for a 
prolonged period, impacts on individuals and populations could be 
significant (e.g., Lusseau and Bejder, 2007; Weilgart, 2007; NRC, 
2005). However, there are broad categories of potential response, which 
we describe in greater detail here, that include alteration of dive 
behavior, alteration of foraging behavior, effects to breathing, 
interference with or alteration of vocalization, avoidance, and flight.
    Changes in dive behavior can vary widely, and may consist of 
increased or decreased dive times and surface intervals as well as 
changes in the rates of ascent and descent during a dive (e.g., Frankel 
and Clark, 2000; Costa et al., 2003; Ng and Leung, 2003; Nowacek et 
al.; 2004; Goldbogen et al., 2013a,b). Variations in dive behavior may 
reflect interruptions in biologically significant activities (e.g., 
foraging) or they may be of little biological significance. The impact 
of an alteration to dive behavior resulting from an acoustic exposure 
depends on what the animal is doing at the time of the exposure and the 
type and magnitude of the response.
    Disruption of feeding behavior can be difficult to correlate with 
anthropogenic sound exposure, so it is usually inferred by observed 
displacement from known foraging areas, the appearance of secondary 
indicators (e.g., bubble nets or sediment plumes), or changes in dive 
behavior. As for other types of behavioral response, the frequency, 
duration, and temporal pattern of signal presentation, as well as 
differences in species sensitivity, are likely contributing factors to 
differences in response in any given circumstance (e.g., Croll et al., 
2001; Nowacek et al.; 2004; Madsen et al., 2006; Yazvenko et al., 
2007). A determination of whether foraging disruptions incur fitness 
consequences would require information on or estimates of the energetic 
requirements of the affected individuals and the relationship between 
prey availability, foraging effort and success, and the life history 
stage of the animal.
    Variations in respiration naturally vary with different behaviors 
and alterations to breathing rate as a function of acoustic exposure 
can be expected to co-occur with other behavioral reactions, such as a 
flight response or an alteration in diving. However, respiration rates 
in and of themselves may be representative of annoyance or an acute 
stress response. Various studies have shown that respiration rates may 
either be unaffected or could increase, depending on the species and 
signal characteristics, again highlighting the importance in 
understanding species differences in the tolerance of underwater noise 
when determining the potential for impacts resulting from anthropogenic 
sound exposure (e.g., Kastelein et al., 2001, 2005b, 2006; Gailey et 
al., 2007).
    Marine mammals vocalize for different purposes and across multiple 
modes, such as whistling, echolocation click production, calling, and 
singing.

[[Page 26641]]

Changes in vocalization behavior in response to anthropogenic noise can 
occur for any of these modes and may result from a need to compete with 
an increase in background noise or may reflect increased vigilance or a 
startle response. For example, in the presence of potentially masking 
signals, humpback whales and killer whales have been observed to 
increase the length of their songs (Miller et al., 2000; Fristrup et 
al., 2003; Foote et al., 2004), while right whales have been observed 
to shift the frequency content of their calls upward while reducing the 
rate of calling in areas of increased anthropogenic noise (Parks et 
al., 2007b). In some cases, animals may cease sound production during 
production of aversive signals (Bowles et al., 1994).
    Avoidance is the displacement of an individual from an area or 
migration path as a result of the presence of a sound or other 
stressors, and is one of the most obvious manifestations of disturbance 
in marine mammals (Richardson et al., 1995). For example, gray whales 
are known to change direction--deflecting from customary migratory 
paths--in order to avoid noise from seismic surveys (Malme et al., 
1984). Avoidance may be short-term, with animals returning to the area 
once the noise has ceased (e.g., Bowles et al., 1994; Goold, 1996; 
Stone et al., 2000; Morton and Symonds, 2002; Gailey et al., 2007). 
Longer-term displacement is possible, however, which may lead to 
changes in abundance or distribution patterns of the affected species 
in the affected region if habituation to the presence of the sound does 
not occur (e.g., Blackwell et al., 2004; Bejder et al., 2006; Teilmann 
et al., 2006).
    A flight response is a dramatic change in normal movement to a 
directed and rapid movement away from the perceived location of a sound 
source. The flight response differs from other avoidance responses in 
the intensity of the response (e.g., directed movement, rate of 
travel). Relatively little information on flight responses of marine 
mammals to anthropogenic signals exist, although observations of flight 
responses to the presence of predators have occurred (Connor and 
Heithaus, 1996). The result of a flight response could range from 
brief, temporary exertion and displacement from the area where the 
signal provokes flight to, in extreme cases, marine mammal strandings 
(Evans and England, 2001). However, it should be noted that response to 
a perceived predator does not necessarily invoke flight (Ford and 
Reeves, 2008), and whether individuals are solitary or in groups may 
influence the response.
    Behavioral disturbance can also impact marine mammals in more 
subtle ways. Increased vigilance may result in costs related to 
diversion of focus and attention (i.e., when a response consists of 
increased vigilance, it may come at the cost of decreased attention to 
other critical behaviors such as foraging or resting). These effects 
have generally not been demonstrated for marine mammals, but studies 
involving fish and terrestrial animals have shown that increased 
vigilance may substantially reduce feeding rates (e.g., Beauchamp and 
Livoreil, 1997; Fritz et al., 2002; Purser and Radford, 2011). In 
addition, chronic disturbance can cause population declines through 
reduction of fitness (e.g., decline in body condition) and subsequent 
reduction in reproductive success, survival, or both (e.g., Harrington 
and Veitch, 1992; Daan et al., 1996; Bradshaw et al., 1998). However, 
Ridgway et al. (2006) reported that increased vigilance in bottlenose 
dolphins exposed to sound over a five-day period did not cause any 
sleep deprivation or stress effects.
    Many animals perform vital functions, such as feeding, resting, 
traveling, and socializing, on a diel cycle (24-hour cycle). Disruption 
of such functions resulting from reactions to stressors such as sound 
exposure are more likely to be significant if they last more than one 
diel cycle or recur on subsequent days (Southall et al., 2007). 
Consequently, a behavioral response lasting less than one day and not 
recurring on subsequent days is not considered particularly severe 
unless it could directly affect reproduction or survival (Southall et 
al., 2007). Note that there is a difference between multi-day 
substantive behavioral reactions and multi-day anthropogenic 
activities. For example, just because an activity lasts for multiple 
days does not necessarily mean that individual animals are either 
exposed to activity-related stressors for multiple days or, further, 
exposed in a manner resulting in sustained multi-day substantive 
behavioral responses.
    3. Stress responses--An animal's perception of a threat may be 
sufficient to trigger stress responses consisting of some combination 
of behavioral responses, autonomic nervous system responses, 
neuroendocrine responses, or immune responses (e.g., Seyle, 1950; 
Moberg, 2000). In many cases, an animal's first and sometimes most 
economical (in terms of energetic costs) response is behavioral 
avoidance of the potential stressor. Autonomic nervous system responses 
to stress typically involve changes in heart rate, blood pressure, and 
gastrointestinal activity. These responses have a relatively short 
duration and may or may not have a significant long-term effect on an 
animal's fitness.
    Neuroendocrine stress responses often involve the hypothalamus-
pituitary-adrenal system. Virtually all neuroendocrine functions that 
are affected by stress--including immune competence, reproduction, 
metabolism, and behavior--are regulated by pituitary hormones. Stress-
induced changes in the secretion of pituitary hormones have been 
implicated in failed reproduction, altered metabolism, reduced immune 
competence, and behavioral disturbance (e.g., Moberg, 1987; Blecha, 
2000). Increases in the circulation of glucocorticoids are also equated 
with stress (Romano et al., 2004).
    The primary distinction between stress (which is adaptive and does 
not normally place an animal at risk) and ``distress'' is the cost of 
the response. During a stress response, an animal uses glycogen stores 
that can be quickly replenished once the stress is alleviated. In such 
circumstances, the cost of the stress response would not pose serious 
fitness consequences. However, when an animal does not have sufficient 
energy reserves to satisfy the energetic costs of a stress response, 
energy resources must be diverted from other functions. This state of 
distress will last until the animal replenishes its energetic reserves 
sufficient to restore normal function.
    Relationships between these physiological mechanisms, animal 
behavior, and the costs of stress responses are well-studied through 
controlled experiments and for both laboratory and free-ranging animals 
(e.g., Holberton et al., 1996; Hood et al., 1998; Jessop et al., 2003; 
Krausman et al., 2004; Lankford et al., 2005). Stress responses due to 
exposure to anthropogenic sounds or other stressors and their effects 
on marine mammals have also been reviewed (Fair and Becker, 2000; 
Romano et al., 2002b) and, more rarely, studied in wild populations 
(e.g., Romano et al., 2002a). For example, Rolland et al. (2012) found 
that noise reduction from reduced ship traffic in the Bay of Fundy was 
associated with decreased stress in North Atlantic right whales. These 
and other studies lead to a reasonable expectation that some marine 
mammals will experience physiological stress responses upon exposure to 
acoustic stressors and that it is possible that some of these would be 
classified as ``distress.'' In addition, any animal experiencing TTS 
would likely also

[[Page 26642]]

experience stress responses (NRC, 2003).
    4. Auditory masking--Sound can disrupt behavior through masking, or 
interfering with, an animal's ability to detect, recognize, or 
discriminate between acoustic signals of interest (e.g., those used for 
intraspecific communication and social interactions, prey detection, 
predator avoidance, navigation) (Richardson et al., 1995). Masking 
occurs when the receipt of a sound is interfered with by another 
coincident sound at similar frequencies and at similar or higher 
intensity, and may occur whether the sound is natural (e.g., snapping 
shrimp, wind, waves, precipitation) or anthropogenic (e.g., shipping, 
sonar, seismic exploration) in origin. The ability of a noise source to 
mask biologically important sounds depends on the characteristics of 
both the noise source and the signal of interest (e.g., signal-to-noise 
ratio, temporal variability, direction), in relation to each other and 
to an animal's hearing abilities (e.g., sensitivity, frequency range, 
critical ratios, frequency discrimination, directional discrimination, 
age or TTS hearing loss), and existing ambient noise and propagation 
conditions.
    Under certain circumstances, marine mammals experiencing 
significant masking could also be impaired from maximizing their 
performance fitness in survival and reproduction. Therefore, when the 
coincident (masking) sound is man-made, it may be considered harassment 
when disrupting or altering critical behaviors. It is important to 
distinguish TTS and PTS, which persist after the sound exposure, from 
masking, which occurs during the sound exposure. Because masking 
(without resulting in TS) is not associated with abnormal physiological 
function, it is not considered a physiological effect, but rather a 
potential behavioral effect.
    The frequency range of the potentially masking sound is important 
in determining any potential behavioral impacts. For example, low-
frequency signals may have less effect on high-frequency echolocation 
sounds produced by odontocetes but are more likely to affect detection 
of mysticete communication calls and other potentially important 
natural sounds such as those produced by surf and some prey species. 
The masking of communication signals by anthropogenic noise may be 
considered as a reduction in the communication space of animals (e.g., 
Clark et al., 2009) and may result in energetic or other costs as 
animals change their vocalization behavior (e.g., Miller et al., 2000; 
Foote et al., 2004; Parks et al., 2007b; Di Iorio and Clark, 2009; Holt 
et al., 2009). Masking can be reduced in situations where the signal 
and noise come from different directions (Richardson et al., 1995), 
through amplitude modulation of the signal, or through other 
compensatory behaviors (Houser and Moore, 2014). Masking can be tested 
directly in captive species (e.g., Erbe, 2008), but in wild populations 
it must be either modeled or inferred from evidence of masking 
compensation. There are few studies addressing real-world masking 
sounds likely to be experienced by marine mammals in the wild (e.g., 
Branstetter et al., 2013).
    Masking affects both senders and receivers of acoustic signals and 
can potentially have long-term chronic effects on marine mammals at the 
population level as well as at the individual level. Low-frequency 
ambient sound levels have increased by as much as 20 dB (more than 
three times in terms of SPL) in the world's ocean from pre-industrial 
periods, with most of the increase from distant commercial shipping 
(Hildebrand, 2009). All anthropogenic sound sources, but especially 
chronic and lower-frequency signals (e.g., from vessel traffic), 
contribute to elevated ambient sound levels, thus intensifying masking.
    Potential Effects of Pile Driving Sound--The effects of sounds from 
pile driving might include one or more of the following: Temporary or 
permanent hearing impairment, non-auditory physical or physiological 
effects, behavioral disturbance, and masking (Richardson et al., 1995; 
Gordon et al., 2003; Nowacek et al., 2007; Southall et al., 2007). The 
effects of pile driving on marine mammals are dependent on several 
factors, including the type and depth of the animal; the pile size and 
type, and the intensity and duration of the pile driving sound; the 
depth of the water column; the substrate; the standoff distance between 
the pile and the animal; and the sound propagation properties of the 
environment. Impacts to marine mammals from pile driving activities are 
expected to result primarily from acoustic pathways. As such, the 
degree of effect is intrinsically related to the frequency, received 
level, and duration of the sound exposure, which are in turn influenced 
by the distance between the animal and the source. The further away 
from the source, the less intense the exposure should be. The substrate 
and depth of the habitat affect the sound propagation properties of the 
environment. In addition, substrates that are soft (e.g., sand) would 
absorb or attenuate the sound more readily than hard substrates (e.g., 
rock) which may reflect the acoustic wave. Soft porous substrates would 
also likely require less time to drive the pile, and possibly less 
forceful equipment, which would ultimately decrease the intensity of 
the acoustic source.
    In the absence of mitigation, impacts to marine species could be 
expected to include physiological and behavioral responses to the 
acoustic signature (Viada et al., 2008). Potential effects from 
impulsive sound sources like pile driving can range in severity from 
effects such as behavioral disturbance to temporary or permanent 
hearing impairment (Yelverton et al., 1973).
    Hearing Impairment and Other Physical Effects--Marine mammals 
exposed to high intensity sound repeatedly or for prolonged periods can 
experience hearing threshold shifts. PTS constitutes injury, but TTS 
does not (Southall et al., 2007). Based on the best scientific 
information available, the SPLs for the construction activities in this 
project are far below the thresholds that could cause TTS or the onset 
of PTS: 180 dB re 1 [mu]Pa rms for odontocetes and 190 dB re 1 [mu]Pa 
rms for pinnipeds (Table 4).
    Non-auditory Physiological Effects--Non-auditory physiological 
effects or injuries that theoretically might occur in marine mammals 
exposed to strong underwater sound include stress, neurological 
effects, bubble formation, resonance effects, and other types of organ 
or tissue damage (Cox et al., 2006; Southall et al., 2007). Studies 
examining such effects are limited. In general, little is known about 
the potential for pile driving to cause auditory impairment or other 
physical effects in marine mammals. Available data suggest that such 
effects, if they occur at all, would presumably be limited to short 
distances from the sound source and to activities that extend over a 
prolonged period. The available data do not allow identification of a 
specific exposure level above which non-auditory effects can be 
expected (Southall et al., 2007) or any meaningful quantitative 
predictions of the numbers (if any) of marine mammals that might be 
affected in those ways. Marine mammals that show behavioral avoidance 
of pile driving, including some odontocetes and some pinnipeds, are 
especially unlikely to incur auditory impairment or non-auditory 
physical effects.

Disturbance Reactions

    Responses to continuous sound, such as vibratory pile installation, 
have not been documented as well as responses to pulsed sounds. With 
both types of pile driving, it is likely that the onset of

[[Page 26643]]

pile driving could result in temporary, short term changes in an 
animal's typical behavior and/or avoidance of the affected area. These 
behavioral changes may include (Richardson et al., 1995): changing 
durations of surfacing and dives, number of blows per surfacing, or 
moving direction and/or speed; reduced/increased vocal activities; 
changing/cessation of certain behavioral activities (such as 
socializing or feeding); visible startle response or aggressive 
behavior (such as tail/fluke slapping or jaw clapping); avoidance of 
areas where sound sources are located; and/or flight responses (e.g., 
pinnipeds flushing into water from haul-outs or rookeries). Pinnipeds 
may increase their haul-out time, possibly to avoid in-water 
disturbance (Thorson and Reyff, 2006).
    The biological significance of many of these behavioral 
disturbances is difficult to predict, especially if the detected 
disturbances appear minor. However, the consequences of behavioral 
modification could be expected to be biologically significant if the 
change affects growth, survival, or reproduction. Significant 
behavioral modifications that could potentially lead to effects on 
growth, survival, or reproduction include:
     Drastic changes in diving/surfacing patterns (such as 
those thought to cause beaked whale stranding due to exposure to 
military mid-frequency tactical sonar);
     Longer-term habitat abandonment due to loss of desirable 
acoustic environment; and
     Longer-term cessation of feeding or social interaction.
    The onset of behavioral disturbance from anthropogenic sound 
depends on both external factors (characteristics of sound sources and 
their paths) and the specific characteristics of the receiving animals 
(hearing, motivation, experience, demography) and is difficult to 
predict (Southall et al., 2007).

Auditory Masking

    Natural and artificial sounds can disrupt behavior by masking. The 
frequency range of the potentially masking sound is important in 
determining any potential behavioral impacts. Because sound generated 
from in-water pile driving is mostly concentrated at low frequency 
ranges, it may have less effect on high frequency echolocation sounds 
made by porpoises. The most intense underwater sounds in the proposed 
action are those produced by impact pile driving. Given that the energy 
distribution of pile driving covers a broad frequency spectrum, sound 
from these sources would likely be within the audible range of marine 
mammals present in the project area. Impact pile driving activity is 
relatively short-term, with rapid pulses occurring for approximately 
fifteen minutes per pile. The probability for impact pile driving 
resulting from this proposed action masking acoustic signals important 
to the behavior and survival of marine mammal species is low. Vibratory 
pile driving is also relatively short-term, with rapid oscillations 
occurring for approximately one and a half hours per pile. It is 
possible that vibratory pile driving resulting from this proposed 
action may mask acoustic signals important to the behavior and survival 
of marine mammal species, but the short-term duration and limited 
affected area would result in insignificant impacts from masking. Any 
masking event that could possibly rise to Level B harassment under the 
MMPA would occur concurrently within the zones of behavioral harassment 
already estimated for vibratory and impact pile driving, and which have 
already been taken into account in the exposure analysis.
    Acoustic Effects, Airborne--Pinnipeds that occur near the project 
site could be exposed to airborne sounds associated with pile driving 
that have the potential to cause behavioral harassment, depending on 
their distance from pile driving activities. Cetaceans are not expected 
to be exposed to airborne sounds that would result in harassment as 
defined under the MMPA.
    Airborne noise will primarily be an issue for pinnipeds that are 
swimming or hauled out near the project site within the range of noise 
levels elevated above the acoustic criteria in Table 4 below. We 
recognize that pinnipeds in the water could be exposed to airborne 
sound that may result in behavioral harassment when looking with heads 
above water. Most likely, airborne sound would cause behavioral 
responses similar to those discussed above in relation to underwater 
sound. For instance, anthropogenic sound could cause hauled-out 
pinnipeds to exhibit changes in their normal behavior, such as 
reduction in vocalizations, or cause them to temporarily abandon the 
area and move further from the source. However, these animals would 
previously have been `taken' as a result of exposure to underwater 
sound above the behavioral harassment thresholds, which are in all 
cases larger than those associated with airborne sound. Thus, the 
behavioral harassment of these animals is already accounted for in 
these estimates of potential take. Multiple incidents of exposure to 
sound above NMFS' thresholds for behavioral harassment are not believed 
to result in increased behavioral disturbance, in either nature or 
intensity of disturbance reaction. Therefore, we do not believe that 
authorization of incidental take resulting from airborne sound for 
pinnipeds is warranted, and airborne sound is not discussed further 
here.

Vessel Interaction

    Besides being susceptible to vessel strikes, cetacean and pinniped 
responses to vessels may result in behavioral changes, including 
greater variability in the dive, surfacing, and respiration patterns; 
changes in vocalizations; and changes in swimming speed or direction 
(NRC 2003). There will be a temporary and localized increase in vessel 
traffic during construction.

Anticipated Effects on Marine Mammal Habitat

    The proposed activities at SOT would not result in permanent 
negative impacts to habitats used directly by marine mammals, but may 
have potential short-term impacts to food sources such as forage fish 
and may affect acoustic habitat (see masking discussion above). There 
are no known foraging hotspots or other ocean bottom structure of 
significant biological importance to marine mammals present in the 
marine waters of the project area. Therefore, the main impact issue 
associated with the proposed activity would be temporarily elevated 
sound levels and the associated direct effects on marine mammals, as 
discussed previously in this document, as well as potential short-term 
effects to water and sediment quality.
    The primary potential acoustic impacts to marine mammal habitat are 
associated with elevated sound levels produced by vibratory and impact 
pile driving and removal in the area. However, other potential impacts 
to the surrounding habitat from physical disturbance are also possible.
    The proposed dredging activities were designed to remove impacted 
sediments (i.e., sediments with metals and/or polycyclic aromatic 
hydrocarbon (PAH) concentrations exceeding sediment cleanup objectives. 
The volume of potentially contaminated material subject to dredging and 
treatment or disposal in an approved hazardous waste facility is 
estimated to be 17,300 cubic yards. The dredging activities are 
predicted to have a positive impact on the habitat, and any negative 
short term impacts (discussed below) are inconsequential in comparison 
to the

[[Page 26644]]

overall benefit the environment will receive from these actions.
    Sediments within the proposed dredge footprint at the Skagway 
Harbor have been recently sampled and tested (Anchor QEA 2014). 
Sediment chemistry data show levels of current sediment contamination 
that may cause low, chronic, long term ecological effects to benthic 
habitats, but would not likely cause acute, toxic effects within the 
water column. The dredge prism of potentially contaminated sediment 
occupies approximately 41,000 square feet (0.004 square kilometers), 
adjacent to the Ore Dock. Physical resuspension of sediments would 
occur during dredging and would produce localized impacts to water 
quality in the form of elevated turbidity plumes that would last from a 
few minutes to several hours. Associated contaminants are expected to 
be tightly bound to the sediment matrix. Because of the relatively 
small dredge prism, these plumes would be limited to the immediate 
vicinity of the Ore Dock and this portion of Skagway Harbor. There is 
the potential for pinnipeds to be exposed to increased turbidity during 
dredge operations within Skagway Harbor. However, exposure to 
resuspended contaminants is expected to be low since sediments would 
not be ingested and contaminants would be tightly bound to them. Best 
management practices will be instituted to limit exposure pathways in 
areas where dredge materials are being handled. Given the relatively 
small dredge footprint, which limits the size of the dredge plume; the 
turbidity will be limited by efforts taken to limit/prevent exposure 
through BMPs; the plume will be temporary and will not have a direct 
exposure mechanism to marine mammals; and activities will occur during 
the winter period when fewer pinnipeds have been observed in the area, 
effects on marine mammals are considered negligible.

Construction Effects on Potential Prey

    Construction activities would produce continuous (i.e., vibratory 
pile driving) sounds and pulsed (i.e. impact driving) sounds. Fish 
react to sounds that are especially strong and/or intermittent low-
frequency sounds. Short duration, sharp sounds can cause overt or 
subtle changes in fish behavior and local distribution. Hastings and 
Popper (2005) identified several studies that suggest fish may relocate 
to avoid certain areas of sound energy. Additional studies have 
documented effects of pile driving on fish, although several are based 
on studies in support of large, multiyear bridge construction projects 
(e.g., Scholik and Yan, 2001, 2002; Popper and Hastings, 2009). Sound 
pulses at received levels of 160 dB may cause subtle changes in fish 
behavior. SPLs of 180 dB may cause noticeable changes in behavior 
(Pearson et al., 1992; Skalski et al., 1992). SPLs of sufficient 
strength have been known to cause injury to fish and fish mortality.
    The most likely impact to fish from pile driving activities at the 
project area would be temporary behavioral avoidance of the area. The 
duration of fish avoidance of this area after pile driving stops is 
unknown, but a rapid return to normal recruitment, distribution and 
behavior is anticipated. In general, impacts to marine mammal prey 
species are expected to be minor and temporary due to the short 
timeframe for the project.
    Construction activities, in the form of increased turbidity, have 
the potential to adversely affect forage fish and juvenile salmonid 
outmigratory routes in the project area. Both herring and salmon form a 
significant prey base for Steller sea lions, and herring is a primary 
prey of humpback whales. Increased turbidity is expected to occur in 
the immediate vicinity (on the order of 10 feet or less) of 
construction activities. However, suspended sediments and particulates 
are expected to dissipate quickly within a single tidal cycle. Given 
the limited area affected and high tidal dilution rates any effects on 
forage fish and salmon are expected to be minor or negligible. In 
addition, best management practices will be in effect, which will limit 
the extent of turbidity to the immediate project area. Finally, 
exposure to these contaminants from dredging is not expected to be 
different from the current exposure; fish and marine mammals in the 
Taiya Inlet/Lynn Canal region are routinely exposed to substantial 
levels of suspended sediment from glacial sources.

Construction Effects on Potential Foraging Habitat

    Pile installation may temporarily increase turbidity resulting from 
suspended sediments. Any increases would be temporary, localized, and 
minimal. MOS must comply with state water quality standards during 
these operations by limiting the extent of turbidity to the immediate 
project area. In general, turbidity associated with pile installation 
is localized to about a 25-foot radius around the pile (Everitt et al. 
1980). Cetaceans are not expected to be close enough to the project 
pile driving areas to experience effects of turbidity, and any 
pinnipeds will be transiting the area and could avoid localized areas 
of turbidity. Therefore, the impact from increased turbidity levels is 
expected to be discountable to marine mammals. Furthermore, pile 
driving and removal at the project site will not obstruct movements or 
migration of marine mammals.
    Noise measurements of dredging activities are rare in the 
literature, but dredging is considered to be a low-impact activity for 
marine mammals, producing non-pulsed sound and being substantially 
quieter in terms of acoustic energy output than sources such as seismic 
airguns and impact pile driving. Noise produced by dredging operations 
has been compared to that produced by a commercial vessel travelling at 
modest speed (Robinson et al., 2011). Further discussion of dredging 
sound production may be found in the literature (e.g., Richardson et 
al., 1995, Nedwell et al., 2008, Parvin et al., 2008, Ainslie et al., 
2009). Generally, the effects of dredging on marine mammals are not 
expected to rise to the level of a take. However, one study found peak 
sound pressure levels from clamshell dredging in Cook Inlet measured 
124 decibels (re 1 [mu]Pa) at the 150 meter isopleth with the peak 
sound levels associated with the dredger striking the hard ocean floor 
(Dickerson et al. 2001). Therefore, to further reduce potential 
acoustic impacts to endangered humpback whales and Steller sea lions, 
there will be a 200 meter dredging shutdown zone for ESA-listed 
species.

Proposed Mitigation

    In order to issue an IHA under section 101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA, 
NMFS must set forth the permissible methods of taking pursuant to such 
activity, ``and other means of effecting the least practicable impact 
on such species or stock and its habitat, paying particular attention 
to rookeries, mating grounds, and areas of similar significance, and on 
the availability of such species or stock for taking'' for certain 
subsistence uses.
    Measurements from similar pile driving events were coupled with 
practical spreading loss to estimate zones of influence (ZOI; see 
Estimated Take by Incidental Harassment); these values were used to 
develop mitigation measures for pile driving and removal activities at 
SOT. The ZOIs effectively represent the mitigation zone that would be 
established around each pile to provide estimates of the areas within 
which Level B, and potential Level A, harassment might occur. In 
addition to the specific measures described later in this section, MOS 
would conduct briefings between construction supervisors and crews, 
marine mammal monitoring team, and other staff prior to the start of 
all pile driving activity, and

[[Page 26645]]

when new personnel join the work, in order to explain responsibilities, 
communication procedures, marine mammal monitoring protocol, and 
operational procedures.
    For the proposed project, MOS worked with NMFS and proposed the 
following mitigation measures to minimize the potential impacts to 
marine mammals in the project vicinity. The primary purposes of these 
mitigation measures are to minimize sound levels from the activities, 
and to monitor marine mammals within designated zones of influence 
corresponding to NMFS' current Level A and B harassment thresholds 
which are depicted in Table 4 found later in the Estimated Take by 
Incidental Harassment section.

Monitoring and Shutdown for Pile Driving

    The following measures, developed by MOS and NMFS, would apply to 
the MOS's mitigation through shutdown and disturbance zones:
    Shutdown Zone--For all pile driving activities, the MOS will 
establish a shutdown zone intended to contain the area in which SPLs 
equal or exceed the 180 dB rms acoustic injury criteria for cetaceans, 
and 190 dB rms for pinnipeds. The purpose of a shutdown zone is to 
define an area within which shutdown of activity would occur upon 
sighting of a marine mammal (or in anticipation of an animal entering 
the defined area), thus preventing injury of marine mammals (as 
described previously under Potential Effects of the Specified Activity 
on Marine Mammals). Serious injury or death are unlikely outcomes even 
in the absence of mitigation measures. Modeled radial distances for 
shutdown zones are shown in Table 5 below. A minimum shutdown zone of 
16 m will be established for the 190-dB zone, and 74 m for the 180 dB 
zone.
    A 200 meter shutdown zone will be in effect for ESA-listed species 
for potential acoustic disturbance caused by clamshell dredging. This 
activity has been recorded at 124 dB peak at the 150 meter isopleth 
(Dickerson et al 2001). Peak SPLs are generally a few dB higher than 
rms SPLs. In this instance, we do not know exactly what the difference 
would be, and while this activity may exceed marine mammal acoustic 
thresholds at its source, we do not expect this activity to rise above 
background noise in this industrial area (see Description of Sound 
Sources section for more information), and therefore do not consider 
take for this activity. Acoustic impacts from clamshell dredging will 
not be considered further in this document.
    Disturbance Zone--Disturbance zones are the areas in which SPLs 
equal or exceed 160 and 120 dB rms (for impulse and continuous sound, 
respectively). Disturbance zones provide utility for monitoring 
conducted for mitigation purposes (i.e., shutdown zone monitoring) by 
establishing monitoring protocols for areas adjacent to the shutdown 
zones. Monitoring of disturbance zones enables observers to be aware of 
and communicate the presence of marine mammals in the project area but 
outside the shutdown zone and thus prepare for potential shutdowns of 
activity. However, the primary purpose of disturbance zone monitoring 
is for documenting incidents of Level B harassment; disturbance zone 
monitoring is discussed in greater detail later (see Proposed 
Monitoring and Reporting). Nominal radial distances for disturbance 
zones are shown in Table 5. Given the size of the disturbance zone for 
vibratory pile driving, it is impossible to guarantee that all animals 
would be observed or to make comprehensive observations of fine-scale 
behavioral reactions to sound, and only a portion of the zone (e.g., 
what may be reasonably observed by visual observers stationed within 
the SOT) would be observed.
    In order to document observed incidents of harassment, monitors 
record all marine mammal observations, regardless of location. The 
observer's location, as well as the location of the pile being driven 
or removed, is known from a GPS. The location of the animal is 
estimated as a distance from the observer, which is then compared to 
the location from the pile. It may then be estimated whether the animal 
was exposed to sound levels constituting incidental harassment on the 
basis of predicted distances to relevant thresholds in post-processing 
of observational and acoustic data, and a precise accounting of 
observed incidences of harassment created. This information may then be 
used to extrapolate observed takes to reach an approximate 
understanding of actual total takes.
    Monitoring Protocols--Monitoring would be conducted before, during, 
and after pile driving and removal activities. In addition, observers 
shall record all incidents of marine mammal occurrence, regardless of 
distance from activity, and shall document any behavioral reactions in 
concert with distance from piles being driven or removed. Observations 
made outside the shutdown zone will not result in shutdown; that pile 
segment would be completed without cessation, unless the animal 
approaches or enters the shutdown zone, at which point all pile driving 
activities would be halted. Monitoring will take place from 15 minutes 
prior to initiation through 30 minutes post-completion of pile driving 
activities. Pile driving activities include the time to install or 
remove a single pile or series of piles, as long as the time elapsed 
between uses of the pile driving equipment is no more than thirty 
minutes. Please see Appendix A of the application for details on the 
marine mammal monitoring plan developed by the MOS with NMFS' 
cooperation.
    The following additional measures apply to visual monitoring:
    (1) Monitoring will be conducted by qualified observers, who will 
be placed at the best vantage point(s) practicable to monitor for 
marine mammals and implement shutdown/delay procedures when applicable 
by calling for the shutdown to the hammer operator. Qualified observers 
are trained biologists, with the following minimum qualifications:
    (a) Visual acuity in both eyes (correction is permissible) 
sufficient for discernment of moving targets at the water's surface 
with ability to estimate target size and distance; use of binoculars 
may be necessary to correctly identify the target;
    (b) Advanced education in biological science or related field 
(undergraduate degree or higher required);
    (c) Experience and ability to conduct field observations and 
collect data according to assigned protocols (this may include academic 
experience);
    (d) Experience or training in the field identification of marine 
mammals, including the identification of behaviors;
    (e) Sufficient training, orientation, or experience with the 
construction operation to provide for personal safety during 
observations;
    (f) Writing skills sufficient to prepare a report of observations 
including but not limited to the number and species of marine mammals 
observed; dates and times when in-water construction activities were 
conducted; dates and times when in-water construction activities were 
suspended to avoid potential incidental injury from construction sound 
of marine mammals observed within a defined shutdown zone; and marine 
mammal behavior; and
    (g) Ability to communicate orally, by radio or in person, with 
project personnel to provide real-time information on marine mammals 
observed in the area as necessary.

[[Page 26646]]

    (2) Prior to the start of pile driving activity, the shutdown zone 
will be monitored for 15 minutes to ensure that it is clear of marine 
mammals. Pile driving will only commence once observers have declared 
the shutdown zone clear of marine mammals; animals will be allowed to 
remain in the shutdown zone (i.e., must leave of their own volition) 
and their behavior will be monitored and documented. The shutdown zone 
may only be declared clear, and pile driving started, when the entire 
shutdown zone is visible (i.e., when not obscured by dark, rain, fog, 
etc.). In addition, if such conditions should arise during impact pile 
driving that is already underway, the activity would be halted.
    (3) If a marine mammal approaches or enters the shutdown zone 
during the course of pile driving operations, activity will be halted 
and delayed until either the animal has voluntarily left and been 
visually confirmed beyond the shutdown zone or 15 minutes have passed 
without re-detection of the animal. Monitoring will be conducted 
throughout the time required to drive a pile.

Ramp Up or Soft Start

    The use of a soft start procedure is believed to provide additional 
protection to marine mammals by warning or providing a chance to leave 
the area prior to the hammer operating at full capacity, and typically 
involves a requirement to initiate sound from the hammer at reduced 
energy followed by a waiting period. This procedure is repeated two 
additional times. It is difficult to specify the reduction in energy 
for any given hammer because of variation across drivers and, for 
impact hammers, the actual number of strikes at reduced energy will 
vary because operating the hammer at less than full power results in 
``bouncing'' of the hammer as it strikes the pile, resulting in 
multiple ``strikes.'' The project will utilize soft start techniques 
for all vibratory and impact pile driving. The MOS will initiate sound 
from vibratory hammers for fifteen seconds at reduced energy followed 
by a 1-minute waiting period, with the procedure repeated two 
additional times. For impact driving, we require an initial set of 
three strikes from the impact hammer at reduced energy, followed by a 
1-minute waiting period, then two subsequent three strike sets. Soft 
start will be required at the beginning of each day's pile driving work 
and at any time following a cessation of pile driving of thirty minutes 
or longer.
    If a marine mammal is present within the Level A harassment zone, 
ramping up will be delayed until the animal(s) leaves the Level A 
harassment zone. Activity will begin only after the Marine Mammal 
Observer (MMO) has determined, through sighting, that the animal(s) has 
moved outside the Level A harassment zone, or if 15 minutes have passed 
without resighting the animals.
    In addition to the measures described later in this section, the 
MOS would employ the following standard mitigation measures:
    (a) Conduct briefings between construction supervisors and crews, 
marine mammal monitoring team, and other staff prior to the start of 
all pile driving activity, and when new personnel join the work, in 
order to explain responsibilities, communication procedures, marine 
mammal monitoring protocol, and operational procedures.
    (b) For in-water heavy machinery work other than pile driving 
(using, e.g., standard barges, tug boats, barge-mounted excavators, or 
clamshell equipment used to place or remove material), if a marine 
mammal comes within 10 m, operations shall cease and vessels shall 
reduce speed to the minimum level required to maintain steerage and 
safe working conditions.
    Time Restrictions--In-water work would occur only during daylight 
hours, when visual monitoring of marine mammals can be conducted. To 
minimize impacts to hooligan, Pacific herring, and capelin, during 
their spawning and migration period, all in-water pile extraction and 
installation will be suspended during this time (April 1 through May 
31).
    Sound attenuation devices--Sound levels can be greatly reduced 
during impact pile driving using sound attenuation devices. There are 
several types of sound attenuation devices including bubble curtains, 
cofferdams, and isolation casings (also called temporary noise 
attenuation piles [TNAP]), and cushion blocks. The MOS proposes to use 
bubble curtains and pile caps. Pile caps include a mat that rests on 
the piles that have been driven into soft or unstable ground to provide 
a suitable stable foundation, thus reducing sound levels. Bubble 
curtains create a column of air bubbles rising around a pile from the 
substrate to the water surface. The air bubbles absorb and scatter 
sound waves emanating from the pile, thereby reducing the sound energy.
    Bubble curtains may be confined or unconfined. An unconfined bubble 
curtain may consist of a ring seated on the substrate and emitting air 
bubbles from the bottom. An unconfined bubble curtain may also consist 
of a stacked system, that is, a series of multiple rings placed at the 
bottom and at various elevations around the pile. Stacked systems may 
be more effective than non-stacked systems in areas with high current 
and deep water (Oestman et al., 2009).
    A confined bubble curtain contains the air bubbles within a 
flexible or rigid sleeve made from plastic, cloth, or pipe. Confined 
bubble curtains generally offer higher attenuation levels than 
unconfined curtains because they may physically block sound waves and 
they prevent air bubbles from migrating away from the pile. For this 
reason, the confined bubble curtain is commonly used in areas with high 
current velocity (Oestman et al., 2009).
    Both environmental conditions and the characteristics of the sound 
attenuation device may influence the effectiveness of the device. 
According to Oestman et al. (2009):
     In general, confined bubble curtains attain better sound 
attenuation levels in areas of high current than unconfined bubble 
curtains. If an unconfined device is used, high current velocity may 
sweep bubbles away from the pile, resulting in reduced levels of sound 
attenuation.
     Softer substrates may allow for a better seal for the 
device, preventing leakage of air bubbles and escape of sound waves. 
This increases the effectiveness of the device. Softer substrates also 
provide additional attenuation of sound traveling through the 
substrate.
     Flat bottom topography provides a better seal, enhancing 
effectiveness of the sound attenuation device, whereas sloped or 
undulating terrain reduces or eliminates its effectiveness.
     Air bubbles must be close to the pile; otherwise, sound 
may propagate into the water, reducing the effectiveness of the device.
     Harder substrates may transmit ground-borne sound and 
propagate it into the water column.
    The literature presents a wide array of observed attenuation 
results for bubble curtains (e.g., Oestman et al., 2009; Coleman, 
2011;). The variability in attenuation levels is due to variation in 
design, as well as differences in site conditions and difficulty in 
properly installing and operating in-water attenuation devices. As a 
general rule, reductions of greater than 10 dB cannot be reliably 
predicted. For 36-in piles the average rms reduction with use of the 
bubble curtain was nine dB, where the averages of all bubble-on and 
bubble-off data were compared. For 48-in piles, the average SPL 
reduction with use of a

[[Page 26647]]

bubble curtain was seven dB for average rms values.
    To avoid loss of attenuation from design and implementation errors, 
the MOS has required specific bubble curtain design specifications, 
including testing requirements for air pressure and flow prior to 
initial impact hammer use, and a requirement for placement on the 
substrate. Bubble curtains shall be used during all impact pile 
driving. The device will distribute air bubbles around 100 percent of 
the piling perimeter for the full depth of the water column, and the 
lowest bubble ring shall be in contact with the mudline for the full 
circumference of the ring. We considered six dB as potentially the best 
estimate of average SPL (rms) reduction, assuming appropriate 
deployment and no problems with the equipment. Therefore, a six dB 
reduction was used in the MOS's analysis of pile driving noise in the 
environmental analyses.

Timing Restrictions

    In the SOT, designated timing restrictions exist for pile driving 
activities to avoid in-water work during the hooligan run in the spring 
(April and May) when marine mammals arrive in huge numbers to feed. The 
in-water work window is between July and October, to avoid this 
spawning run. All in-water construction activities will occur during 
daylight hours (sunrise to sunset)

Contaminant Exposure Mitigation

    To minimize the potential for marine mammals to be exposed to 
harmful or toxic contaminants in the sediment during dredging 
operations, mitigation measures will be employed. These measures 
include a partial height silt curtain and contamination sequencing. The 
objective when using silt curtains is to create a physical barrier 
around the dredge equipment by protecting against the spread of 
suspended sediment that is generated during dredging operations in the 
portion of the water column in which the silt curtain extends. Silt 
curtains can be effective tools to minimize or reduce potential water 
quality impacts during dredging, when used properly and in the right 
site conditions. The silt curtain will be constructed of flexible, 
reinforced, thermoplastic material with flotation material in the upper 
hem and ballast material in the lower hem. The curtain will be placed 
in the water surrounding the dredging operation. The specifications 
will require that the Contractor maintain the silt curtain(s) around 
either the point of dredging or the dredging area (and potentially 
other in-water construction areas) at the contractor's discretion, in 
order to reduce the potential for water quality impacts and the 
transport of suspended solids beyond the project dredging boundaries.
    Because they are mostly impermeable, silt curtains are easily 
affected by tides and currents and their effectiveness can be adversely 
impacted by high current velocities, moderate to large wave conditions, 
or large tidal variation. The required height of the silt curtain will 
be determined during subsequent design to determine a height that 
balances environmental protection and the efficiency to maintain the 
silt curtain in place during dredging based on tidal and current 
velocities in the harbor. The effectiveness of the silt curtain will be 
monitored during construction and changes may be implemented based on 
the results of monitoring to either enhance the protection of the silt 
curtain or otherwise make modifications to the silt curtain 
configuration to provide for more effective dredge operations while 
still meeting water quality requirements.
    Contamination sequencing involves prioritizing the removal of the 
most impacted areas (i.e., the area with the highest observed 
concentrations of contaminants of concern) before the surrounding 
areas. Ultimately, the necessary phasing and sequencing of the overall 
project (e.g., dock demolition to facilitate remedial dredging) must be 
taken into consideration along with the safety of the dredging 
contractor.

Mitigation Conclusions

    NMFS has carefully evaluated the applicant's proposed mitigation 
measures and considered a range of other measures in the context of 
ensuring that NMFS prescribes the means of affecting the least 
practicable impact on the affected marine mammal species and stocks and 
their habitat. Our evaluation of potential measures included 
consideration of the following factors in relation to one another: (1) 
The manner in which, and the degree to which, the successful 
implementation of the measure is expected to minimize adverse impacts 
to marine mammals; (2) the proven or likely efficacy of the specific 
measure to minimize adverse impacts as planned; and (3) the 
practicability of the measure for applicant implementation,
    Any mitigation measure(s) prescribed by NMFS should be able to 
accomplish, have a reasonable likelihood of accomplishing (based on 
current science), or contribute to the accomplishment of one or more of 
the general goals listed below:
    (1) Avoidance or minimization of injury or death of marine mammals 
wherever possible (goals 2, 3, and 4 may contribute to this goal).
    (2) A reduction in the numbers of marine mammals (total number or 
number at biologically important time or location) exposed to received 
levels of pile driving, or other activities expected to result in the 
take of marine mammals (this goal may contribute to 1, above, or to 
reducing harassment takes only).
    (3) A reduction in the number of times (total number or number at 
biologically important time or location) individuals would be exposed 
to stimuli expected to result in incidental take of marine mammals 
(this goal may contribute to 1, above, or to reducing harassment takes 
only).
    (4) A reduction in the intensity of exposures (either total number 
or number at biologically important time or location to stimuli 
expected to result in incidental take (this goal may contribute to 1, 
above, or to reducing the severity of harassment takes only).
    (5) Avoidance or minimization of adverse effects to marine mammal 
habitat, paying particular attention to the prey base, activities that 
block or limit passage to or from biologically important areas, 
permanent destruction of habitat, or temporary destruction/disturbance 
of habitat during a biologically important time.
    (6) For monitoring directly related to mitigation--an increase in 
the probability of detecting marine mammals, thus allowing for more 
effective implementation of the mitigation.
    Based on our evaluation of the applicant's proposed measures, as 
well as other measures considered by NMFS, NMFS has preliminarily 
determined that the proposed mitigation measures provide the means of 
effecting the least practicable impact on marine mammals species or 
stocks and their habitat, paying particular attention to rookeries, 
mating grounds, and areas of similar significance.
    Proposed measures to ensure availability of such species or stock 
for taking for certain subsistence uses are discussed later in this 
document (see Impact on Availability of Affected Species or Stock for 
Taking for Subsistence Uses section).

Proposed Monitoring and Reporting

    In order to issue an IHA for an activity, section 101(a)(5)(D) of 
the MMPA states that NMFS must set forth ``requirements pertaining to 
the monitoring and reporting of such taking.'' The MMPA implementing

[[Page 26648]]

regulations at 50 CFR 216.104 (a)(13) indicate that requests for 
incidental take authorizations must include the suggested means of 
accomplishing the necessary monitoring and reporting that will result 
in increased knowledge of the species and of the level of taking or 
impacts on populations of marine mammals that are expected to be 
present in the proposed action area.
    Any monitoring requirement we prescribe should improve our 
understanding of one or more of the following:
     Occurrence of marine mammal species in action area (e.g., 
presence, abundance, distribution, density).
     Nature, scope, or context of likely marine mammal exposure 
to potential stressors/impacts (individual or cumulative, acute or 
chronic), through better understanding of: (1) Action or environment 
(e.g., source characterization, propagation, ambient noise); (2) 
Affected species (e.g., life history, dive patterns); (3) Co-occurrence 
of marine mammal species with the action; or (4) Biological or 
behavioral context of exposure (e.g., age, calving or feeding areas).
     Individual responses to acute stressors, or impacts of 
chronic exposures (behavioral or physiological).
     How anticipated responses to stressors impact either: (1) 
Long-term fitness and survival of an individual; or (2) Population, 
species, or stock.
     Effects on marine mammal habitat and resultant impacts to 
marine mammals.
     Mitigation and monitoring effectiveness.
    The MOS submitted a marine mammal monitoring plan as part of the 
IHA application for this project, which can be found at 
www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental/construction.htm. The plan may 
be modified or supplemented based on comments or new information 
received from the public during the public comment period.

Visual Marine Mammal Observation

    The MOS will collect sighting data and behavioral responses to 
construction for marine mammal species observed in the region of 
activity during the period of activity. All observers will be trained 
in marine mammal identification and behaviors and are required to have 
no other construction-related tasks while conducting monitoring. The 
MOS will monitor the shutdown zone and disturbance zone before, during, 
and after pile driving, with observers located at the best practicable 
vantage points. The Marine Mammal Observers (MMOs) and MOS authorities 
will meet to determine the most appropriate observation platform(s) for 
monitoring during pile installation and extraction.
    Based on our requirements, the MOS would implement the following 
procedures for pile driving:
     Individuals meeting the minimum qualifications identified 
in the applicant's monitoring plan (Appendix A of the application) 
would monitor Level A and Level B harassment zones during pile driving 
and extraction activities.
     The area within the Level B harassment threshold for 
impact driving will be monitored by appropriately stationed MMOs. Any 
marine mammal documented within the Level B harassment zone during 
impact driving would constitute a Level B take (harassment), and will 
be recorded and reported as such.
     During impact and vibratory pile driving, a shutdown zone 
will be established to include all areas where the underwater SPLs are 
anticipated to equal or exceed the Level A (injury) criteria for marine 
mammals (180 dB isopleth for cetaceans; 190 dB isopleth for pinnipeds). 
Pile installation will not commence or will be suspended temporarily if 
any marine mammals are observed within or approaching the area.
     The individuals will scan the waters within each 
monitoring zone activity using binoculars, spotting scopes, and visual 
observation.
     Use a hand-held or boat-mounted GPS device or rangefinder 
to verify the required monitoring distance from the project site.
     If poor environmental conditions restricts the observers' 
ability to make observations within the marine mammal shutdown zone 
(e.g. excessive wind or fog, high beaufort state), pile installation 
will cease. Pile driving will not be initiated until the entire 
shutdown zone is visible.
     Conduct pile driving and extraction activities only during 
daylight hours from sunrise to sunset when it is possible to visually 
monitor marine mammals.
     The waters will be scanned 15 minutes prior to commencing 
pile driving at the beginning of each day, and prior to commencing pile 
driving after any stoppage of 30 minutes or greater. If marine mammals 
enter or are observed within the designated marine mammal shutdown zone 
during or 15 minutes prior to pile driving, the monitors will notify 
the on-site construction manager to not begin until the animal has 
moved outside the designated radius.
     The waters will continue to be scanned for at least 30 
minutes after pile driving has completed each day, and after each 
stoppage of 30 minutes or greater.

Data Collection

    We require that observers use approved data forms. Among other 
pieces of information, the MOS will record detailed information about 
any implementation of shutdowns, including the distance of animals to 
the pile and description of specific actions that ensued and resulting 
behavior of the animal, if any. In addition, the MOS will attempt to 
distinguish between the number of individual animals taken and the 
number of incidents of take. We require that, at a minimum, the 
following information be collected on the sighting forms:
     Date and time that monitored activity begins or ends;
     Construction activities occurring during each observation 
period;
     Weather parameters (e.g., percent cover, visibility);
     Water conditions (e.g., sea state, tide state);
     Species, numbers, and, if possible, sex and age class of 
marine mammals;
     Description of any observable marine mammal behavior 
patterns, including bearing and direction of travel and distance from 
pile driving activity;
     Distance from pile driving activities to marine mammals 
and distance from the marine mammals to the observation point;
     Description of implementation of mitigation measures 
(e.g., shutdown or delay);
     Locations of all marine mammal observations; and
     Other human activity in the area.

Reporting

    A draft report would be submitted to NMFS within 90 days of the 
completion of marine mammal monitoring, or sixty days prior to the 
requested date of issuance of any future IHA for projects at the same 
location, whichever comes first. The report will include marine mammal 
observations pre-activity, during-activity, and post-activity during 
pile driving days, and will also provide descriptions of any behavioral 
responses to construction activities by marine mammals and a complete 
description of all mitigation shutdowns and the results of those 
actions and an extrapolated total take estimate based on the number of 
marine mammals observed during the course of construction. A final 
report must be submitted within thirty days following resolution of 
comments on the draft report.

[[Page 26649]]

    In the unanticipated event that the specified activity clearly 
causes the take of a marine mammal in a manner prohibited by the IHA 
(if issued), such as serious injury or mortality (e.g., ship-strike, 
gear interaction, and/or entanglement), the MOS would immediately cease 
the specified activities and immediately report the incident to the 
Chief of the Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected 
Resources, NMFS, and the Alaska Stranding Coordinator. The report would 
include the following information:
     Time, date, and location (latitude/longitude) of the 
incident;
     Name and type of vessel involved;
     Vessel's speed during and leading up to the incident;
     Description of the incident;
     Status of all sound source use in the 24 hours preceding 
the incident;
     Water depth;
     Environmental conditions (e.g., wind speed and direction, 
Beaufort sea state, cloud cover, and visibility);
     Description of all marine mammal observations in the 24 
hours preceding the incident;
     Species identification or description of the animal(s) 
involved;
     Fate of the animal(s); and
     Photographs or video footage of the animal(s) (if 
equipment is available).
    Activities would not resume until NMFS is able to review the 
circumstances of the prohibited take. NMFS would work with the MOS to 
determine what is necessary to minimize the likelihood of further 
prohibited take and ensure MMPA compliance. The MOS would not be able 
to resume their activities until notified by NMFS via letter, email, or 
telephone.
    In the event that the MOS discovers an injured or dead marine 
mammal, and the lead MMO determines that the cause of the injury or 
death is unknown and the death is relatively recent (i.e., in less than 
a moderate state of decomposition as described in the next paragraph), 
the MOS would immediately report the incident to the Chief of the 
Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected Resources, NMFS, 
and the Alaska Stranding Coordinator.
    The report would include the same information identified in the 
paragraph above. Activities would be able to continue while NMFS 
reviews the circumstances of the incident. NMFS would work with the MOS 
to determine whether modifications in the activities are appropriate.
    In the event that the MOS discovers an injured or dead marine 
mammal, and the lead MMO determines that the injury or death is not 
associated with or related to the activities authorized in the IHA 
(e.g., previously wounded animal, carcass with moderate to advanced 
decomposition, or scavenger damage), the MOS would report the incident 
to the Chief of the Permits and Conservation Division, Office of 
Protected Resources, NMFS, and the NMFS West Coast Stranding Hotline 
and/or by email to the Alaska Stranding Coordinator, within 24 hours of 
the discovery. The MOS would provide photographs or video footage (if 
available) or other documentation of the stranded animal sighting to 
NMFS and the Marine Mammal Stranding Network.

Estimated Take by Incidental Harassment

    Except with respect to certain activities not pertinent here, 
section 3(18) of the MMPA defines ``harassment'' as: ``. . . any act of 
pursuit, torment, or annoyance which (i) has the potential to injure a 
marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild [Level A harassment]; 
or (ii) has the potential to disturb a marine mammal or marine mammal 
stock in the wild by causing disruption of behavioral patterns, 
including, but not limited to, migration, breathing, nursing, breeding, 
feeding, or sheltering [Level B harassment].''
    All anticipated takes would be by Level B harassment resulting from 
vibratory pile driving and removal. Level B harassment may result in 
temporary changes in behavior. Note that Level A harassment and lethal 
takes are not expected due to the proposed mitigation and monitoring 
measures that are expected to minimize the possibility of such take.
    If a marine mammal responds to a stimulus by changing its behavior 
(e.g., through relatively minor changes in locomotion direction/speed 
or vocalization behavior), the response may or may not constitute 
taking at the individual level, and is unlikely to affect the stock or 
the species as a whole. However, if a sound source displaces marine 
mammals from an important feeding or breeding area for a prolonged 
period, impacts on animals, and if so potentially on the stock or 
species, could potentially be significant (e.g., Lusseau and Bejder, 
2007; Weilgart, 2007). Given the many uncertainties in predicting the 
quantity and types of impacts of sound on marine mammals, it is common 
practice to estimate how many animals are likely to be present within a 
particular distance of a given activity, or exposed to a particular 
level of sound. In practice, depending on the amount of information 
available to characterize daily and seasonal movement and distribution 
of affected marine mammals, it can be difficult to distinguish between 
the number of individuals harassed and the instances of harassment and, 
when duration of the activity is considered, it can result in a take 
estimate that overestimates the number of individuals harassed. In 
particular, for stationary activities, it is more likely that some 
smaller number of individuals may accrue a number of incidences of 
harassment per individual than for each incidence to accrue to a new 
individual, especially if those individuals display some degree of 
residency or site fidelity and the impetus to use the site (e.g., 
because of foraging opportunities) is stronger than the deterrence 
presented by the harassing activity.
    Upland work can generate airborne sound and create visual 
disturbance that could potentially result in disturbance to marine 
mammals (specifically, pinnipeds) that are hauled out or at the water's 
surface with heads above the water. However, because any haul-outs in 
close proximity to the SOT would be subsumed in the disturbance zone, 
incidents of incidental take resulting from airborne sound or visual 
disturbance would already be included in those counts.
    In order to estimate the potential incidents of take that may occur 
incidental to the specified activity, we must first estimate the extent 
of the sound field that may be produced by the activity and then 
consider in combination with information about marine mammal density or 
abundance in the project area. We first provide information on 
applicable sound thresholds for determining effects to marine mammals 
before describing the information used in estimating the sound fields, 
the available marine mammal density or abundance information, and the 
method of estimating potential incidences of take.

Sound Thresholds

    We use the following generic sound exposure thresholds to determine 
when an activity that produces sound might result in impacts to a 
marine mammal such that a take by harassment might occur. These 
thresholds (Table 4) are used to estimate when harassment may occur 
(i.e., when an animal is exposed to levels equal to or exceeding the 
relevant criterion) in specific contexts; however, useful contextual 
information that may inform our assessment of effects is typically 
lacking and we consider these thresholds as step functions. NMFS is 
working to revise

[[Page 26650]]

these acoustic guidelines; for more information on that process, please 
visit www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/acoustics/guidelines.htm.

               Table 4--Current Acoustic Exposure Criteria
------------------------------------------------------------------------
          Criterion           Criterion definition       Threshold *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level A harassment            PTS (injury)          190 dB RMS for
 (underwater).                 conservatively        pinnipeds, 180 dB
                               based on TTS **.      RMS for cetaceans.
Level B harassment            Behavioral            160 dB RMS
 (underwater).                 disruption.           (impulsive source),
                                                     120 dB RMS
                                                     (continuous
                                                     source).
Level B harassment            Behavioral            90 dB (harbor
 (airborne).                   disruption.           seals), 100dB
                                                     (other pinnipeds)
                                                     (unweighted).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* All decibel levels referenced to 1 micropascal (re: 1 [mu]Pa). Note
  all thresholds are based off root mean square (RMS) levels.
** PTS = Permanent Threshold Shift; TTS = Temporary Threshold Shift.

Distance to Sound Thresholds

    The sound field in the project area is the existing ambient noise 
plus additional construction noise from the proposed project. The 
primary components of the project expected to affect marine mammals is 
the sound generated by impact pile driving, vibratory pile driving, and 
vibratory pile removal. Dredging and direct pull and clamshell removal 
of old timber piles do not produce noise levels expected to result in 
take of marine mammals. This activity has been recorded at 124 dB peak 
at the 150 meter isopleth (Dickerson et al 2001). While this activity 
may exceed marine mammal acoustic thresholds at its source, we do not 
expect this activity to rise above background noise in this industrial 
area, and therefore do not consider take for this activity. Depending 
on conditions, removal of timber piles may require vibratory hammer 
removal. Impact hammering typically generates the loudest noise 
associated with pile driving.
    The project includes vibratory removal of steel piles and creosote-
treated piles, summarized in Table 1; and vibratory installation of 24-
, 36-, 48-, and 60-inch diameter steel pipe piles, summarized in Table 
2. The Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) and 
California Department of Transportation have compiled acoustic 
monitoring data for various pile-driving projects within their 
respective states (WSDOT unpublished; ICF Jones & Stokes and 
Illingworth and Rodkin 2009, updated in 2012). Upon review of these 
datasets, it was determined that driving moderate-sized steel piles 
with a vibratory pile driver will generate sound pressure levels (SPLs) 
of 170 dB RMS (ICF Jones & Stokes and Illingworth and Rodkin 2009, 
updated in 2012). Noise levels are on the order of 150 dB rms from pile 
removal activities.
    Underwater Sound Propagation Formula--Pile driving generates 
underwater noise that can potentially result in disturbance to marine 
mammals in the project area. Transmission loss (TL) is the decrease in 
acoustic intensity as an acoustic pressure wave propagates out from a 
source. TL parameters vary with frequency, temperature, sea conditions, 
current, source and receiver depth, water depth, water chemistry, and 
bottom composition and topography. The general formula for underwater 
TL is:

TL = B * log 10 (R 1/R 2),

Where:

TL = transmission loss in dB
R 1 = the distance of the modeled SPL from the driven pile, 
and
R 2 = the distance from the driven pile of the initial 
measurement

    A practical spreading value of fifteen is often used under 
conditions, such as at the Skagway ore terminal, where water increases 
with depth as the receiver moves away from the shoreline, resulting in 
an expected propagation environment that would lie between spherical 
and cylindrical spreading loss conditions. Practical spreading loss 
(4.5 dB reduction in sound level for each doubling of distance) is 
assumed here.
    Distances to the harassment isopleths vary by pile type and size, 
and by pile extraction/driving tool. These distances are summarized in 
Table 5. Note that the actual area ensonified by pile driving or 
removal activities is significantly constrained by local topography 
relative to the total threshold radius. The actual ensonified area was 
determined using a straight line-of-sight projection from the 
anticipated pile driving locations. Distances shown in Table 5 are 
estimated for free-field conditions, but areas are calculated per the 
actual conditions of the action area. See Figures 2-5 of the MOS's 
application for a depiction of areas in which each underwater sound 
threshold is predicted to occur at the project area due to pile driving 
or removal.

                                 Table 5--Distances to Relevant Underwater Sound Thresholds and Areas of Ensonification
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         Distance to criterion (m)
                                                     ----------------------------------------------------------------
              Pile type               Pile size (in)                      Level A         Level A                                 Area (km2)
                                                       Level B (160   cetaceans (180  pinnipeds (190    Continuous
                                                            dB)             dB)             dB)           (120dB)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Impact..............................              24           1,848              86              18  ..............  3.93, 0.072, 0.031.*
                                                  36           1,585              74              16  ..............  3.00, 0.064, 0.029.*
                                                  48           2,154             100              22  ..............  4.96, 0.082, 0.033.*
Vibratory...........................              60  ..............  ..............  ..............         100,000  21.
Vibratory removal...................              12  ..............  ..............  ..............           1,600  3.05.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Values are for 160 dB, 180 dB, and 190 dB, respectively.


[[Page 26651]]

Marine Mammal Densities

    Density data are only available for harbor seals for this area of 
Alaska. Potential exposures to impact and vibratory pile driving noise 
for each threshold for all other marine mammals were estimated using 
published reports of group sizes and population estimates, and 
anecdotal observational reports from local commercial entities. It is 
not currently possible to identify all observed individuals to stock. 
All estimates are conservative and include the following assumptions:
     All pilings installed at each site would have an 
underwater noise disturbance equal to the piling that causes the 
greatest noise disturbance (i.e., the piling farthest from shore) 
installed with the method that has the largest ZOI. The largest 
underwater disturbance ZOI would be produced by vibratory driving steel 
piles. The ZOIs for each threshold are not spherical and are truncated 
by land masses on either side of the channel which would dissipate 
sound pressure waves.
     Exposures were based on estimated work days. Numbers of 
days were based on an average production rate of 73 days of vibratory 
and impact driving and 39 days of pile removal. Note that impact 
driving is likely to occur only on days when vibratory driving occurs.
     All marine mammal individuals potentially available are 
assumed to be present within the relevant area, and thus incidentally 
taken;
     An individual can only be taken once during a 24-h period; 
and,
     Exposures to sound levels at or above the relevant 
thresholds equate to take, as defined by the MMPA.
    The estimation of marine mammal takes typically uses the following 
calculation:
Level B exposure estimate = N (number of animals) in the ensonified 
area * Number of days of noise generating activities

    There are a number of reasons why estimates of potential incidents 
of take may be overestimates of the number of individuals taken, 
assuming that available abundance estimates and estimated ZOI areas are 
accurate. We assume, in the absence of information supporting a more 
refined conclusion, that the output of the calculation represents the 
number of individuals that may be taken by the specified activity. In 
fact, in the context of stationary activities such as pile driving and 
in areas where resident animals may be present, this number represents 
the number of instances of take that may occur to a small number of 
individuals, with a notably smaller number of animals being exposed 
more than once per individual. While pile driving can occur any day 
throughout the in-water work window, and the analysis is conducted on a 
per day basis, only a fraction of that time (typically a matter of 
hours on any given day) is actually spent pile driving. The potential 
effectiveness of mitigation measures in reducing the number of takes is 
typically not quantified in the take estimation process. For these 
reasons, these take estimates may be conservative, especially if each 
take is considered a separate individual animal, and especially for 
pinnipeds. See Table 6 for total estimated incidents of take.

                              Table 6--Calculations for Incidental Take Estimation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  N (animals) in                     Proposed authorized takes
                     Species                      the ensonified  Number of days -------------------------------
                                                       area         of activity       Level A         Level B
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harbor Seal.....................................              44              74               0           2,272
Steller sea lion................................              32              74               0           1,184
Humpback whale..................................               2              42               0              84
Killer whale....................................              15               4               0              60
Harbor porpoise.................................               2              84               0             168
Dall's porpoise.................................               3              15               0              45
Minke whale.....................................               0               0               0               0
                                                 ---------------------------------------------------------------
    Total exposures.............................  ..............  ..............               0           3,813
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Description of Marine Mammals in the Area of the Specified Activity

Harbor Seals
    There are no documented long-term haulout sites for harbor seals in 
Taiya Inlet; however, seasonal haulouts are present within five miles 
of the project area at Seal Cove and at the mouth of the Taiya River. 
During the spring run of hooligan in April and May, 20 to over 100 
individual animals have been observed in these areas, with animals 
within inner Taiya Inlet actively feeding. After the spawning run, much 
lower numbers of harbor seals are present. Local observers have found 
that very few, if any; harbors seals are present during the winter (R. 
Ford and K. Gross, personal communications). Harbor seals within the 
Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage stock have maintained a steady to slightly 
declining population over the past five years. The latest stock 
assessment analysis indicates that there is a 71 percent probability 
that the stock has declined by 1.8 percent over this period (Muto and 
Angliss 2015). Using seal stock assessment data from within the Lynn 
Canal/Stephens Passage stock, the calculated density of this stock is 
1.7 animals per square kilometer (total population divided by total 
area). This density was applied to the area within the behavioral 
impact zone for vibratory driving (21 square kilometers, which includes 
most of Taiya Inlet) for a total of 36 animals in the whole of Taiya 
Inlet. These animals are mostly on haulouts in the vicinity of Seal 
Cove, swimming in areas near the waterfront, and hauled out at the 
mouth of the Taiya River. Proposed pile driving will occur in March, 
and in July through October, avoiding the hooligan spawning run and the 
period of maximum local abundance of harbor seals.
    Because harbor seal numbers decrease after the spring hooligan 
spawning run, we estimate that the number of local animals within the 
behavioral zones is estimated to be eight animals (one half of the mean 
range within the lower inlet). This estimate is based on the 
conservative assumption that about half of the animals hauled out at 
Seal Cove and the Taiya River mouth may be transiting through the 
behavioral zone for vibratory driving at any given time during the 
summer (14 days), for a total of 112 takes. The haulouts themselves are 
outside of the behavioral impact zones, approximately five miles from 
the project area. No exposure to the injury zone is expected because of 
the mitigation measures designed to prevent Level A harassment. It is 
expected that the marine mammal monitoring

[[Page 26652]]

program will significantly prevent injury take in this zone. Based on 
calculated density estimates mentioned above, all 36 animals will be 
exposed to the continuous noise behavioral zone, which includes most of 
Taiya Inlet for all days when pile driving activities are expected to 
occur (60 days) for a total of 2,160 takes during this time period. 
Total requested harbor seal takes is 2,272.
Steller Sea Lion
    There are several long-term Steller sea lion haulouts in Lynn Canal 
but none occur in Taiya Inlet. The nearest long-term Steller sea lion 
haulout is located at Gran Point, in the vicinity of Haines 
approximately 20 miles south of Skagway. Other year-round haulouts in 
Lynn Canal are present at Met Point, Benjamin Island, and Little 
Island, closer to Juneau (Fritz et al. 2015). A seasonal haulout site 
is located on Taiya Point rocks at the southern tip of Taiya Inlet. 
Estimates of 25 to 40 animals use this haulout for about three weeks 
during the hooligan run, during which they frequent the inlet (K. 
Gross, personal communication). However, most animals leave the inlet 
shortly after the hooligan run and are scarce after about the first 
week in June. Sea lions are rarely observed in the inlet during the 
winter. This is consistent with the National Marine Mammal Laboratory 
database (Fritz et al., 2015), which has identified the largest number 
of Lynn Canal sea lions during the fall and winter months at Benjamin 
Island in the lower reaches of the canal.
    Taiya Point Rocks are located approximately 12 miles south of 
Skagway and 1.3 miles outside of the continuous noise vibratory 
behavioral impact zone. Given that sea lion presence in Taiya Inlet 
occurs during the hooligan run, during which no pile driving will 
occur, and the nearest haulout site is outside of the behavioral impact 
zone, it is expected that Steller sea lion exposure to pile driving 
will be low. This is similar to observations from local observers, who 
have reported one to three sea lions in Taiya Inlet outside of the 
hooligan spawning run (K. Gross, personal communication). Sea lions 
have been observed in greater numbers in nearby Lutak Inlet in the fall 
during salmon runs, and at the Gran Point haulout near Haines. These 
observations and data suggest that it is reasonable to expect more sea 
lions to travel into Taiya Inlet (J. Womble, personal communication). 
There have been no observations of Steller sea lions in Taiya Inlet 
during the winter. Because Steller sea lions are sparse at times 
outside of the hooligan spawning run, but a portion of the hauled out 
seals may enter Taiya inlet during the salmon runs, we estimated that 
16 Steller sea lions (half of the mean found on Taiya Rocks during the 
hooligan run) will be present within Taiya Inlet during any given time 
while pile driving and pile removal operations are occurring in the 
summer and fall (60 and 14 days, respectively), for a total of 1,184 
total takes for Steller sea lions. Exposure to pile-driving and removal 
activities during the winter is not expected to occur. No Steller sea 
lions are expected to be exposed to the small injury zone near the 
facility. If any do appear, the marine mammal monitoring program would 
effectively prevent take.
Harbor Porpoises
    Harbor porpoise primarily frequent coastal waters, and in the Gulf 
of Alaska and Southeast Alaska, they occur most frequently in waters 
less than 100 meters (Dahlheim et al. 2009). Within the inland waters 
of Southeast Alaska, the harbor porpoise distribution is clumped, with 
greatest densities observed in the Glacier Bay/Icy Strait region, and 
near Zarembo and Wrangell Islands and the adjacent waters of Sumner 
Strait (Allen and Angliss 2014). Dedicated research studies of harbor 
porpoise in this area only occur as far north in Lynn Canal as Haines 
during the summer (Dahlheim et al., 2009; 2015); approximately 16 miles 
south of SOT. Group sizes were on average, between 1.37-1.59 animals 
(less than 2) (Dahlheim et al., 2009; 2015). In Lynn Canal, 
observations were less frequent, primarily in lower Lynn Canal from 
Chatham Strait to Juneau. The species has been observed as far north as 
Haines during the summer (Dahlheim et al., 2009, Dalheim et al., 2015). 
Encounters of small groups of two or three animals have been reported 
by local vessel charters from spring through fall in Taiya Inlet. 
Observations have been frequent, but not on a daily basis. The mean 
group size of harbor porpoise in Southeast Alaska is estimated at two 
individuals (Dahlheim et al. 2009). For the purposes of this analysis 
it is estimated that two harbor porpoises will be present in Taiya 
Inlet, but because observations do not occur daily, we estimate their 
presence within the inlet on 75 percent of days during the pile driving 
period (84 days) for a total of 168 take exposures. Exposure to the 
behavioral disturbance zone from impact pile driving or pile removal is 
not likely to occur, because the species has rarely been observed in 
areas close to the waterfront.
Dall's Porpoise
    Dall's porpoise are widely distributed across the entire North 
Pacific Ocean. Throughout most of the eastern North Pacific they are 
present during all months of the year, although there may be seasonal 
onshore-offshore movements along the west coast of the continental 
United States and winter movements of populations out of Prince William 
Sound and areas in the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea (Allen and Angliss 
2014).
    Dahlheim et al. (2009) found Dall's porpoise throughout Southeast 
Alaska, with concentrations of animals consistently found in Lynn 
Canal, Stephens Passage, Icy Strait, upper Chatham Strait, Frederick 
Sound, and Clarence Strait. Local observers have observed only three to 
six Dall's porpoises in Taiya Inlet during the early spring and late 
fall. Observations have been occasional to sporadic, not occurring 
daily. The species has not been observed near the waterfront, and no 
animals have been observed during the winter (K. Gross, personal 
communication). This is consistent with Dahlheim et al. (2009), who 
have only documented this species in Lynn Canal as far north as Haines, 
Alaska, about 15 miles south of Skagway and 5 miles south of the 
continuous noise behavioral impact zone. The mean group size of Dall's 
porpoise in Southeast Alaska is estimated at three individuals 
(Dahlheim et al. 2009). For the purposes of this analysis, we estimate 
that three animals will be present in outer Taiya Inlet for the latter 
half of the summer pile-driving period. Since observations during the 
fall have been occasional, we also assume a presence in the inlet every 
other day, for a total of 15 days of exposure, and 45 total takes. 
Exposure to the behavioral disturbance zone from impact pile driving or 
pile removal is not likely to occur, because the species has rarely 
been observed in areas close to the waterfront.
Killer Whales
    Resident and transient killer whales have been documented in the 
middle to lower reaches of Lynn Canal, but not within the upper reaches 
or in Taiya Inlet (Dahlheim et al., 2009). Two resident pods identified 
as AF and AG pods were frequently encountered throughout Icy Strait, 
Lynn Canal, Stephens Passage, Frederick Sound and upper Chatham Strait 
(Dahlheim et al., 2009). The seasonality of resident killer whales 
could not be investigated statistically owing to low encounter rates. 
Mean group size of resident

[[Page 26653]]

whales did not vary significantly among seasons and ranged from 19 to 
33 individuals.
    Transient killer whales were found in all major waterways, 
including Lynn Canal in open-strait environments, near-shore waters, 
protected bays and inlets, and in ice-laden waters near tidewater 
glaciers (Dahlheim et al. 2009). Dahlheim et al. (2009) found that 
transient killer whale mean group size ranged from four to six 
individuals in Southeast Alaska. Transient killer whale numbers were 
highest in summer, with lower numbers observed in spring and fall. 
Although this stock's range includes southeast Alaska, it has only been 
documented as far north as Lynn Canal; therefore, while possible, 
occurrence north of Lynn Canal into Taiya Inlet is rare.
    Local observations indicate that resident pods occasionally enter 
Taiya Inlet, usually a group of 15 to 20 animals. These animals are 
typically observed only a few times a year (K. Gross, personal 
communication). In 2015 a resident pod was only observed in Taiya Inlet 
twice, remaining for one to four days per visit (K. Gross, personal 
communication). Based on these observations, we conservatively used the 
larger group size for all killer whale stocks (Northern residents), and 
the likelihood of stocks being present, to estimate a maximum of 60 
killer whale takes (e.g. for Northern residents, at most, 15 killer 
whales may enter the inlet on two occasions during the summer, 
remaining in the inlet for two days per visit. All other stocks would 
likely be smaller in group size, and not occur as frequently).
Humpback Whale
    Humpback whales are the most commonly observed baleen whale in the 
area and surrounding Southeast Alaska, particularly during spring and 
summer months. Humpback whales in Alaska, although not limited to these 
areas, return to specific feeding locations such as Frederick Sound, 
Chatham Strait, North Pass, Sitka Sound, Glacier Bay, Point Adolphus, 
and Prince William Sound, as well as other similar coastal areas (Wing 
and Krieger 1983). In Lynn Canal they have been observed in the spring 
and fall from Haines to Juneau. Scientific surveys have not documented 
the species within Taiya Inlet (Dahlheim et al., 2009). The humpback 
whale population in Southeast Alaska appears to be increasing with 
estimates of 547 animals in the mid-1980s (Angliss and Outlaw 2005) and 
961 animals in 2000 (Straley et al., 2002).
    Local observers have reported humpback whales in Taiya Inlet, 
sometimes fairly close to the Skagway waterfront. In 2015, only one 
whale was observed for a few weeks close to Skagway. On average, four 
to five individuals may occur near the town during the spring hooligan 
run, after which, only a few individuals are observed on and off 
through the summer (K. Gross, personal communication). No pile driving 
will occur during the spring hooligan run. For the purpose of this 
analysis, because humpback whale occurrence is rare and generally 
occurs in the spring when construction will not occur, it is estimated 
that two humpback whales may be present over two 3-week periods (42 
days) during the summer, for a total of 84 takes. Exposure to the 
behavioral disturbance zone from impact pile driving or pile removal is 
not likely to occur, because the species has rarely been observed in 
areas close to the waterfront.

Analysis and Preliminary Determinations

Negligible Impact

    NMFS has defined ``negligible impact'' in 50 CFR 216.103 as ``. . . 
an impact resulting from the specified activity that cannot be 
reasonably expected to, and is not reasonably likely to, adversely 
affect the species or stock through effects on annual rates of 
recruitment or survival.'' A negligible impact finding is based on the 
lack of likely adverse effects on annual rates of recruitment or 
survival (i.e., population-level effects). An estimate of the number of 
Level B harassment takes alone is not enough information on which to 
base an impact determination. In addition to considering estimates of 
the number of marine mammals that might be ``taken'' through behavioral 
harassment, we consider other factors, such as the likely nature of any 
responses (e.g., intensity, duration), the context of any responses 
(e.g., critical reproductive time or location, migration), as well as 
the number and nature of estimated Level A harassment takes, the number 
of estimated mortalities, and effects on habitat.
    To avoid repetition, the discussion of our analyses applies 
generally to all the species listed in Table 3, given that the 
anticipated effects of this pile driving project on marine mammals are 
expected to be relatively similar in nature. Where there are species-
specific factors that have been considered, they are identified below.
    Pile extraction and pile driving, activities associated with the 
reconstruction of the SOT, as outlined previously, have the potential 
to disturb or displace marine mammals. Specifically, the specified 
activities may result in take, in the form of Level B harassment 
(behavioral disturbance), from underwater sounds generated from pile 
driving and removal. Potential takes could occur if individuals of 
these species are present in the ensonified zone when pile driving and 
removal are under way.
    The takes from Level B harassment will be due to potential 
behavioral disturbance and TTS. No mortality is anticipated given the 
nature of the activity and measures designed to minimize the 
possibility of injury to marine mammals. The potential for these 
outcomes is minimized through the construction method and the 
implementation of the planned mitigation measures (see Proposed 
Mitigation section). Vibratory driving does not have significant 
potential to cause injury to marine mammals due to the relatively low 
source levels produced and the lack of potentially injurious source 
characteristics. Impact driving does have the potential to injure 
marine mammals; however; the marine mammal detection ability by trained 
observers is high under the environmental conditions described for the 
reconstruction of the SOT, which further enables the implementation of 
shutdowns to limit injury, serious injury, or mortality.
    The MOS's proposed activities are localized and of relatively short 
duration (maximum 73 days for pile driving activities; 39 days for pile 
removal, and a maximum of 40 days of dredging). The entire project area 
is limited to the SOT area and its immediate surroundings. These 
localized and short-term noise exposures may cause short-term 
behavioral modifications in harbor seals, Steller sea lions, killer 
whales, harbor porpoises, Dall's porpoises, and humpback whales. 
Moreover, the proposed mitigation and monitoring measures, including 
injury shutdowns, soft start techniques, and multiple MMOs monitoring 
the behavioral and injury zones for marine mammal presence, are 
expected to reduce the likelihood of injury and behavior exposures. 
Additionally, no important feeding and/or reproductive areas for marine 
mammals are known to be within the ensonification areas of the proposed 
action area during the construction time frame.
    The project also is not expected to have significant adverse 
effects on affected marine mammals' habitat. The project activities 
would not modify existing marine mammal habitat for a significant 
amount of time. The activities may cause some fish to leave

[[Page 26654]]

the area of disturbance, thus temporarily impacting marine mammals' 
foraging opportunities in a limited portion of the foraging range; but, 
because of the short duration of the activities and the relatively 
small area of the habitat that may be affected, the impacts to marine 
mammal habitat are not expected to cause significant or long-term 
negative consequences.
    Effects on individuals that are taken by Level B harassment, on the 
basis of reports in the literature as well as monitoring from other 
similar activities, will likely be limited to reactions such as 
increased swimming speeds, increased surfacing time, or decreased 
foraging (if such activity were occurring) (e.g., Thorson and Reyff, 
2006; Lerma, 2014). Most likely, individuals will simply move away from 
the sound source and be temporarily displaced from the areas of pile 
driving, although even this reaction has been observed primarily only 
in association with impact pile driving. Repeated exposures of 
individuals to levels of sound that may cause Level B harassment are 
unlikely to result in permanent hearing impairment or to significantly 
disrupt foraging behavior due to the lack of quality foraging habitat 
near the ore terminal. Thus, even repeated Level B harassment of some 
small subset of the overall stock is unlikely to result in any 
significant realized decrease in fitness for the affected individuals, 
and thus would not result in any adverse impact to the stock as a 
whole.
    In summary, this negligible impact analysis is founded on the 
following factors: (1) The possibility of non-auditory injury, serious 
injury, or mortality may reasonably be considered discountable; (2) the 
anticipated instances of Level B harassment consist of, at worst, 
temporary modifications in behavior or potential TTS and; (3) the 
presumed efficacy of the proposed mitigation measures in reducing the 
effects of the specified activity to the level of least practicable 
impact. In combination, we believe that these factors, as well as the 
available body of evidence from other similar activities, demonstrate 
that the potential effects of the specified activity will have only 
short-term effects on individuals. The specified activity is not 
reasonably expected to and is not reasonably likely to adversely affect 
the marine mammal species or stocks through effects on annual rates of 
recruitment or survival and will therefore not result in population-
level impacts.
    Based on the analysis contained herein of the likely effects of the 
specified activity on marine mammals and their habitat, and taking into 
consideration the implementation of the proposed monitoring and 
mitigation measures, NMFS preliminarily finds that the total marine 
mammal take from the MOS's reconstruction of the SOT will have a 
negligible impact on the affected marine mammal species or stocks.

Small Numbers Analysis

    Table 7 demonstrates the number of animals that could be exposed to 
received noise levels that could cause Level B behavioral harassment 
for the proposed work at the SOT project site. The numbers of animals 
authorized to be taken for all species would be considered small 
relative to the relevant stocks or populations even if each estimated 
taking occurred to a new individual--an extremely unlikely scenario. 
The total percent of the population for which take is requested is less 
than one percent for humpback whales (Central North Pacific stock), and 
less than 2.5 percent for affected stocks of Steller sea lions (eDPS 
and wDPS) and harbor porpoise (Southeast Alaska stock). The most recent 
abundance estimate (83,400) for the affected stock of Dall's porpoise 
(Alaska stock) is over 20 years old (Allen and Angliss 2012); 
therefore, the stock size is unknown for Dall's porpoise. The total 
percent of the population for which take is requested is therefore also 
unknown; however, the 45 total take requests is a small enough number 
that it would be considered a small percent of this stock, which we 
know is fairly large based on anecdotal information. For killer whales 
(Alaska stock, Northern resident stock, Gulf of Alaska stock, and West 
Coast transient stock) and harbor seals (Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage 
stock), the percentage of the stock for which take is requested is less 
than 25 percent for all affected stocks. For pinnipeds, especially 
harbor seals occurring in the vicinity of the SOT, there will almost 
certainly be some overlap in individuals present day-to-day, and these 
takes are likely to occur only within some small portion of the overall 
regional stock.
    The total authorized take for killer whales as compared to each 
potentially affected stock ranges from 2.7% to 24.7% of each 
population. In reality, it is highly unlikely that 60 individuals of 
any one killer whale stock will not be temporarily harassed. Instead, 
it is assumed that there will be a relatively short period of takes of 
a smaller number of the same individuals from any stock. We make this 
assumption because resident pods are known to occasionally frequent 
Taiya Inlet. It is possible that all or part of these pods will enter 
the disturbance zone once or twice during the course of the project. 
Therefore, we can conservatively estimate that, because of the 
gregarious nature of killer whales, a single pod of resident (15-20) 
killer whales may occur in the disturbance zone once or twice during 
the course of the project. All other stocks are rare in this area; 
however their range includes southeast Alaska, and therefore they may 
occur in the upper reaches of Lynn Canal into Taiya inlet towards 
Skagway, albeit infrequently. Because of this, it is assumed that the 
Northern resident stock is the stock most likely to be affected. 
However, there is a small chance that a small number of individuals of 
other stocks may be potentially affected. For example, transient stocks 
have only been observed in Lynn Canal (outside of the area of 
ensonification), so it likely that-- if this stock were to enter the 
area of ensonification-- the number of transients exposed would be much 
smaller than the take estimate for all killer whales (e.g. average 
group size of 4-6 individuals with few occurrences in the area), and 
would therefore be a smaller percentage of the stock abundance than 
what is calculated by comparing the total authorized take for all 
killer whales to the abundance of this stock. Therefore, we assume that 
the 60 takes will actually affect a smaller number of the same 
individuals of killer whales from any stock.
    Take requests are assumed to include multiple harassments of the 
same individual(s), resulting in estimates of Take Request Percent of 
Stock that are high compared to actual take that will occur. This is 
the case with the harbor seal (Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage stock). As 
reported, a small number of harbor seals, most of which reside in Taiya 
Inlet year-round, will be exposed to vibratory pile driving and removal 
for nearly 4 months. The total population estimate in the Lynn Canal/
Stephens Passage stock is 9,478 animals over 1.37 million acres of 
area. This is a density of 36 animals within Taiya Inlet. The largest 
Level B harassment Zone within the inlet occupies 21.0 square 
kilometers, which represents less than 0.4 percent of the total 
geographical area occupied by the stock. The great majority of these 
exposures will be to the same animals that have habituated to pile 
driving and pile removal activities within the inlet and the general 
port activities associated with the Skagway waterfront. Given that the 
Taiya Inlet area represents less than 0.4 percent of the total stock 
area, broader impacts to this stock are highly

[[Page 26655]]

unlikely. In addition, marine mammal monitoring for the project can 
provide an early alert in the unlikely event that cumulative exposure 
of seals residing in the area is leading to adverse behavioral or 
physical effects.
    Based on the analysis contained herein of the likely effects of the 
specified activity on marine mammals and their habitat, and taking into 
consideration the implementation of the mitigation and monitoring 
measures, which are expected to reduce the number of marine mammals 
potentially affected by the proposed action, NMFS finds that small 
numbers of marine mammals will be taken relative to the populations of 
the affected species or stocks.

          Table 7--Estimated Numbers and Percentage of Stock That May Be Exposed to Level B Harassment
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 Proposed
                   Species                      authorized      Stock(s) abundance estimate \1\    Percentage of
                                                   takes                                            total stock
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harbor Seal (Phoca vitulina)................           2,272  9,478.............................              24
Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage Stock...........
Steller Sea Lion (Eumetopias jubatus)
    wDPS Stock..............................           1,184  49,497............................             2.4
    eDPS Stock..............................  ..............  60,131............................             2.0
Harbor Porpoise (Phocoena phocoena)                      168  11,146............................             1.5
 Southeast Alaska Stock.
Dall's porpoise (Phocoenidae dalli) Alaska                45  unknown...........................             n/a
 Stock.
Killer Whale (Orcinus orca)
    Alaska stock............................  ..............  2,347.............................             2.6
    Northern resident stock.................              60  261...............................              23
    Gulf of Alaska stock....................  ..............  587...............................            10.2
    West coast transient stock..............  ..............  243...............................            24.7
Humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae)                   84  10,252............................            0.82
 Central North Pacific Stock.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ All stock abundance estimates presented here are from the draft 2015 Alaska Stock Assessment Report.

    Based on the analysis contained herein of the likely effects of the 
specified activity on marine mammals and their habitat, and taking into 
consideration the implementation of the mitigation and monitoring 
measures, which are expected to reduce the number of marine mammals 
potentially affected by the proposed action, NMFS preliminarily finds 
that small numbers of marine mammals will be taken relative to the 
populations of the affected species or stocks.

Impact on Availability of Affected Species for Taking for Subsistence 
Uses

    Alaska Natives have traditionally harvested subsistence resources 
in Alaska for many hundreds of years, particularly Steller sea lions 
and harbor seals. The proposed Project will occur near but not overlap 
the subsistence area used by the villages of Hoonah and Angoon (Wolfe 
et al. 2013). Since all project activities will take place within the 
immediate vicinity of the SOT, the project will not have an adverse 
impact on the availability of marine mammals for subsistence use at 
locations farther away. No disturbance or displacement of sea lions or 
harbor seals from traditional hunting areas by activities associated 
with the SOT project is expected. No changes to availability of 
subsistence resources will result from SOT project activities.

Endangered Species Act (ESA)

    There are two marine mammal species that are listed as endangered 
under the ESA with confirmed or possible occurrence in the study area: 
humpback whales and western DPS of Steller sea lions. Under section 7 
of the ESA, the United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) has begun 
consultation with NMFS on the proposed pile driving activities. NMFS 
will also consult internally on the issuance of an IHA under section 
101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA for this activity. Consultation will be 
concluded prior to a determination on the issuance of an IHA.

National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)

    NMFS is preparing an Environmental Assessment (EA) in accordance 
with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and will consider 
comments submitted in response to this notice as part of that process. 
The EA will be posted at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/incidental/construction.htm once it is finalized. NMFS is currently 
conducting an analysis, pursuant to NEPA, to determine whether or not 
this proposed activity may have a significant effect on the human 
environment. This analysis will be completed prior to the issuance or 
denial of this proposed IHA.

Proposed Incidental Harassment Authorization

    As a result of these preliminary determinations, we propose to 
issue an IHA to the MOS for conducting the Skagway Gateway Initiative 
Project, provided the previously mentioned mitigation, monitoring, and 
reporting requirements are incorporated. The proposed IHA language is 
provided next.
    This section contains a draft of the IHA. The wording contained in 
this section is proposed for inclusion in the IHA (if issued).
    1. This Incidental Harassment Authorization (IHA) is valid from 
July 1, 2016 through June 30, 2017.
    2. This Authorization is valid only for in-water construction work 
associated with the Skagway Gateway Initiative Project at the Skagway 
Ore Terminal.
    3. General Conditions.
    (a) A copy of this IHA must be in the possession of the MOS, its 
designees, and work crew personnel operating under the authority of 
this IHA.
    (b) The species authorized for taking include humpback whale 
(Megaptera navaeangliae), killer whale (Orcinus orca), Steller sea lion 
(Eumatopius jubatus), harbor porpoise (Phocoena phocoena), Dall's 
porpoise (Phocoenoides dalli), and harbor seal (Phoca vitulina 
richardii).
    (c) The taking, by Level B harassment only, is limited to the 
species listed in condition 3(b). See Table 1 for numbers of take 
authorized.

[[Page 26656]]



                                        Table 1--Authorized Take Numbers
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                     Proposed authorized takes
                     Species                        N (animals)   Number of days -------------------------------
                                                                    of activity       Level A         Level B
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harbor Seal.....................................              44              74               0           2,272
Steller sea lion................................              32              74               0           1,184
Humpback whale..................................               2              42               0              84
Killer whale....................................              15               4               0              60
Harbor porpoise.................................               2              84               0             168
Dall's porpoise.................................               3              15               0              45
                                                 ---------------------------------------------------------------
    Total exposures.............................  ..............  ..............               0           3,813
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (d) The taking by injury (Level A harassment), serious injury, or 
death of any of the species listed in condition 3(b), or any taking of 
any other species of marine mammal is prohibited and may result in the 
modification, suspension, or revocation of this IHA.
    (e) The MOS shall conduct briefings between construction 
supervisors and crews, marine mammal monitoring team, and staff prior 
to the start of all in-water pile driving, and when new personnel join 
the work, in order to explain responsibilities, communication 
procedures, marine mammal monitoring protocol, and operational 
procedures.
    4. Mitigation Measures
    The holder of this Authorization is required to implement the 
following mitigation measures:
    (a) Time Restriction: For all in-water pile driving activities, the 
MOS shall operate only during daylight hours when visual monitoring of 
marine mammals can be conducted. All in-water pile extraction and 
installation shall be completed by March 31, 2017.
    (b) Establishment of Level B Harassment (ZOI)
    (i) For vibratory driving, the Level B harassment area is contained 
within Taiya Inlet, approximately 17 km from the action area. This 
distance will serve as a shutdown zone for all other marine mammals not 
listed in 3(b). During impact driving, the Level B harassment zone 
shall extend to a minimum of 1,585 m for animals listed in 3(b). This 
1,585-meter distance will serve as a shutdown zone for all other marine 
mammals not listed in 3(b).
    (c) Establishment of shutdown zone.
    (i) A 16-meter shutdown zone will be in effect for Steller sea 
lions and harbor seals. The shutdown zone for Level A injury to 
cetaceans would be 74 meters.
    (d) The Level A and Level B harassment zones will be monitored 
throughout the time required to install or extract a pile. If a marine 
mammal is observed entering the Level B harassment zone, a Level B 
exposure will be recorded and behaviors documented. That pile segment 
will be completed without cessation, unless the animal approaches the 
Level A shutdown zone. Pile installation will be halted immediately 
before the animal enters the Level A zone.
    (e) Use of Ramp Up/Soft Start.
    (i) The project will utilize soft start techniques for all 
vibratory and impact pile driving. We require the MOS to initiate sound 
from vibratory hammers for fifteen seconds at reduced energy followed 
by a 1-minute waiting period, with the procedure repeated two 
additional times. For impact driving, we require an initial set of 
three strikes from the impact hammer at reduced energy, followed by a 
1-minute waiting period, then two subsequent three strike sets.
    (ii) Soft start will be required at the beginning of each day's 
pile driving work and at any time following a cessation of pile driving 
of 30 minutes or longer.
    (iii) If a marine mammal is present within the shutdown zone, 
ramping up will be delayed until the animal(s) leaves the Level A 
harassment zone. Activity will begin only after the MMO has determined, 
through sighting, that the animal(s) has moved outside the Level A 
harassment zone or if 15 minutes have passed without re-sighting of the 
individual.
    (iv) If a marine mammal is present in the Level B harassment zone, 
ramping up will begin and a Level B take will be documented. Ramping up 
will occur when these species are in the Level B harassment zone 
whether they entered the Level B zone from the Level A zone, or from 
outside the project area.
    (v) If any marine mammal other than those listed in this IHA is 
present in the Level B harassment zone, ramping up will be delayed 
until the animal(s) leaves the zone. Ramping up will begin only after 
the MMO has determined, through sighting, that the animal(s) has moved 
outside the harassment zone.
    (f) Sound attenuation devices--Approved sound attenuation devices 
shall be used during impact pile driving operations. The MOS shall 
implement the necessary contractual requirements to ensure that such 
devices are capable of achieving optimal performance, and that 
deployment of the device is implemented properly such that no reduction 
in performance may be attributable to faulty deployment.
    (g) Contaminant exposure mitigation measures--A silt curtain and a 
contamination sequence will be used during all dredging activities.
    (i) The silt curtain will be constructed of flexible, reinforced, 
thermoplastic material with flotation material in the upper hem and 
ballast material in the lower hem. The curtain will be placed in the 
water surrounding the dredging operation. The specifications will 
require that the Contractor maintain the silt curtain(s) around either 
the point of dredging or the dredging area at the contractor's 
discretion. The effectiveness of the silt curtain will be monitored 
during construction.
    (ii) The contractor will prioritize the removal of the most 
impacted areas (i.e., the area with the highest observed concentrations 
of contaminants of concern) before the surrounding areas.
    (h) Standard mitigation measures.
    (i) Conduct briefings between construction supervisors and crews, 
marine mammal monitoring team, and MOS staff prior to the start of all 
pile driving and extraction activity, and when new personnel join the 
work, in order to explain responsibilities, communication procedures, 
marine mammal monitoring protocol, and operational procedures.
    (ii) For in-water heavy machinery work other than pile driving 
(e.g., standard barges, tug boats, barge-mounted excavators, or 
clamshell equipment used to place or remove material), if a marine 
mammal comes within 10 meters, operations shall cease and vessels shall 
reduce speed to the minimum level required to maintain steerage and 
safe working conditions.
    (i) The MOS shall establish monitoring locations as described 
below.
    5. Monitoring and Reporting

[[Page 26657]]

    The holder of this Authorization is required to report all 
monitoring conducted under the IHA within 90 calendar days of the 
completion of the marine mammal monitoring
    (a) Visual Marine Mammal Monitoring and Observation
    (i) At least one individual meeting the minimum qualifications 
identified in Appendix A of the application by the MOS will monitor the 
shutdown and Level B harassment zones during impact and vibratory pile 
driving.
    (ii) During pile driving and extraction, the shutdown zone, as 
described in 4(b), will be monitored and maintained. Pile installation 
or extraction will not commence or will be suspended temporarily if any 
marine mammals are observed within or approaching the area of potential 
disturbance.
    (iii) The area within the Level B harassment threshold for pile 
driving and extraction will be monitored by observers stationed to 
provide adequate view of the harassment zone. Marine mammal presence 
within this Level B harassment zone, if any, will be monitored. Pile 
driving activity will not be stopped if marine mammals are found to be 
present. Any marine mammal documented within the Level B harassment 
zone during impact driving would constitute a Level B take 
(harassment), and will be recorded and reported as such.
    (iv) The individuals will scan the waters within each monitoring 
zone activity using binoculars, spotting scopes, and visual 
observation.
    (v) If waters exceed a sea-state, or poor environmental conditions 
restricts the observers' ability to make observations (e.g. excessive 
wind or fog), impact pile installation will cease until conditions 
allow the resumption of monitoring.
    (vi) The waters will be scanned 30 minutes prior to commencing pile 
driving or removal at the beginning of each day, and prior to 
commencing pile driving or removal after any stoppage of 30 minutes or 
greater. If marine mammals enter or are observed within the designated 
marine mammal shutdown zone during or 30 minutes prior to impact pile 
driving, the monitors will notify the on-site construction manager to 
not begin until the animal has moved outside the designated radius.
    (vii) The waters will continue to be scanned for at least 30 
minutes after pile driving has completed each day,
    (b) Data Collection
    (i) Observers are required to use approved data forms. Among other 
pieces of information, the MOS will record detailed information about 
any implementation of shutdowns, including the distance of animals to 
the pile and description of specific actions that ensued and resulting 
behavior of the animal, if any. In addition, the MOS will attempt to 
distinguish between the number of individual animals taken and the 
number of incidents of take. At a minimum, the following information be 
collected on the sighting forms:
    1. Date and time that monitored activity begins or ends;
    2. Construction activities occurring during each observation 
period;
    3. Weather parameters (e.g., percent cover, visibility);
    4. Water conditions (e.g., sea state, tide state);
    5. Species, numbers, and, if possible, sex and age class of marine 
mammals;
    6. Description of any observable marine mammal behavior patterns, 
including bearing and direction of travel and distance from pile 
driving activity;
    7. Distance from pile driving activities to marine mammals and 
distance from the marine mammals to the observation point;
    8. Locations of all marine mammal observations; and
    9. Other human activity in the area.
    (c) Reporting Measures
    (i) In the unanticipated event that the specified activity clearly 
causes the take of a marine mammal in a manner prohibited by the IHA, 
such as an injury (Level A harassment), serious injury or mortality 
(e.g., ship-strike, gear interaction, and/or entanglement), the MOS 
would immediately cease the specified activities and immediately report 
the incident to the Chief of the Permits and Conservation Division, 
Office of Protected Resources, NMFS, and the Alaska Regional Stranding 
Coordinators. The report would include the following information:
    1. Time, date, and location (latitude/longitude) of the incident;
    2. Name and type of vessel involved;
    3. Vessel's speed during and leading up to the incident;
    4. Description of the incident;
    5. Status of all sound source use in the 24 hours preceding the 
incident;
    6. Water depth;
    7. Environmental conditions (e.g., wind speed and direction, 
Beaufort sea state, cloud cover, and visibility);
    8. Description of all marine mammal observations in the 24 hours 
preceding the incident;
    9. Species identification or description of the animal(s) involved;
    10. Fate of the animal(s); and
    11. Photographs or video footage of the animal(s) (if equipment is 
available).
    (ii) Activities would not resume until NMFS is able to review the 
circumstances of the prohibited take. NMFS would work with the MOS to 
determine what is necessary to minimize the likelihood of further 
prohibited take and ensure MMPA compliance. The MOS would not be able 
to resume their activities until notified by NMFS via letter, email, or 
telephone.
    (iii) In the event that the MOS discovers an injured or dead marine 
mammal, and the lead MMO determines that the cause of the injury or 
death is unknown and the death is relatively recent (i.e., in less than 
a moderate state of decomposition as described in the next paragraph), 
the MOS would immediately report the incident to the Chief of the 
Permits and Conservation Division, Office of Protected Resources, NMFS, 
and the Alaska Stranding Hotline and/or by email to the Alaska Regional 
Stranding Coordinators. The report would include the same information 
identified in the paragraph above. Activities would be able to continue 
while NMFS reviews the circumstances of the incident. NMFS would work 
with the MOS to determine whether modifications in the activities are 
appropriate.
    (iv) In the event that the MOS discovers an injured or dead marine 
mammal, and the lead MMO determines that the injury or death is not 
associated with or related to the activities authorized in the IHA 
(e.g., previously wounded animal, carcass with moderate to advanced 
decomposition, or scavenger damage), the MOS would report the incident 
to the Chief of the Permits and Conservation Division, Office of 
Protected Resources, NMFS, and the NMFS Alaska Stranding Hotline and/or 
by email to the Alaska Regional Stranding Coordinator, within 24 hours 
of the discovery. The DOT&PF would provide photographs or video footage 
(if available) or other documentation of the stranded animal sighting 
to NMFS and the Marine Mammal Stranding Network.
    6. MOS is required to comply with the Reasonable and Prudent 
Measures and Terms and Conditions of the ITS corresponding to NMFS' 
Biological Opinion issued to both U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and 
NMFS' Office of Protected Resources.
    7. This Authorization may be modified, suspended or withdrawn if 
the holder fails to abide by the conditions prescribed herein, or if 
NMFS determines the authorized taking is having more than a negligible 
impact on the species or stock of affected marine mammals.

[[Page 26658]]

Request for Public Comments

    NMFS requests comment on our analysis, the draft authorization, and 
any other aspect of the Notice of Proposed IHA for the Skagway Gateway 
Initiative Project. Please include with your comments any supporting 
data or literature citations to help inform our final decision on MOS's 
request for an MMPA authorization.

    Dated: April 22, 2016.
Perry F. Gayaldo,
Deputy Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2016-10266 Filed 5-2-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 3510-22-P



                                                                                                         Vol. 81                           Tuesday,
                                                                                                         No. 85                            May 3, 2016




                                                                                                         Part II


                                                                                                         Department of Commerce
                                                                                                         National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
                                                                                                         Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to Specified Activities; Taking Marine
                                                                                                         Mammals Incidental to the Skagway Gateway Initiative Project; Notice
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




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                                                    26630                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE                                  information or otherwise sensitive or                 allowable under the specific regulations.
                                                                                                            protected information.                                Under section 101(a)(5)(D), NMFS may
                                                    National Oceanic and Atmospheric                        FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                      authorize such incidental taking by
                                                    Administration                                          Laura McCue, Office of Protected                      harassment only, for periods of not more
                                                                                                            Resources, NMFS, (301) 427–8401.                      than one year, pursuant to requirements
                                                    RIN 0648–XE440
                                                                                                            SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                            and conditions contained within an
                                                    Takes of Marine Mammals Incidental to                                                                         Incidental Harassment Authorization
                                                                                                            Availability                                          (IHA). The establishment of
                                                    Specified Activities; Taking Marine
                                                    Mammals Incidental to the Skagway                         An electronic copy of the MOS’s                     prescriptions through either specific
                                                    Gateway Initiative Project                              application and supporting documents,                 regulations or an authorization requires
                                                                                                            as well as a list of the references cited             notice and opportunity for public
                                                    AGENCY:  National Marine Fisheries                      in this document, may be obtained by                  comment.
                                                    Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and                    visiting the Internet at: http://                        NMFS has defined ‘‘negligible
                                                    Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),                      www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/permits/                         impact’’ in 50 CFR 216.103 as ‘‘an
                                                    Commerce.                                               incidental/construction.htm. In case of               impact resulting from the specified
                                                    ACTION: Notice; proposed incidental                     problems accessing these documents,                   activity that cannot be reasonably
                                                    harassment authorization; request for                   please call the contact listed above.                 expected to, and is not reasonably likely
                                                    comments.                                                                                                     to, adversely affect the species or stock
                                                                                                            National Environmental Policy Act
                                                                                                            (NEPA)                                                through effects on annual rates of
                                                    SUMMARY:    NMFS has received a request                                                                       recruitment or survival.’’ Except with
                                                    from the Municipality of Skagway                          We are preparing an Environmental                   respect to certain activities not pertinent
                                                    (MOS) for authorization to take marine                  Assessment (EA) in accordance with                    here, the MMPA defines ‘‘harassment’’
                                                    mammals incidental to reconstructing                    NEPA and the regulations published by                 as: any act of pursuit, torment, or
                                                    the existing ore dock in Skagway                        the Council on Environmental Quality                  annoyance which (i) has the potential to
                                                    Harbor, Alaska, referred to as the                      and will consider comments submitted                  injure a marine mammal or marine
                                                    Skagway Gateway Initiative project. The                 in response to this notice as part of that            mammal stock in the wild [Level A
                                                    MOS requests that the IHA be valid for                  process. The EA will be posted at the                 harassment]; or (ii) has the potential to
                                                    1 year, from July 1, 2016 through June                  foregoing Web site once it is finalized.              disturb a marine mammal or marine
                                                    30, 2017. Pursuant to the Marine                        Background                                            mammal stock in the wild by causing
                                                    Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), NMFS                                                                            disruption of behavioral patterns,
                                                    is requesting public comment on its                        Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the
                                                                                                                                                                  including, but not limited to, migration,
                                                    proposal to issue an incidental                         MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.) direct
                                                                                                                                                                  breathing, nursing, breeding, feeding, or
                                                    harassment authorization (IHA) to the                   the Secretary of Commerce to allow,
                                                                                                                                                                  sheltering [Level B harassment].
                                                    MOS to incidentally take, marine                        upon request by U.S. citizens who
                                                    mammals for its reconstruction of the                   engage in a specified activity (other than            Summary of Request
                                                    Skagway ore terminal in Skagway, AK.                    commercial fishing) within a specified                   On December 2, 2015, NMFS received
                                                                                                            area, the incidental, but not intentional,            an application from the Municipality of
                                                    DATES: Comments and information must
                                                                                                            taking of small numbers of marine                     Skagway (MOS) for the taking of marine
                                                    be received no later than June 2, 2016.                 mammals, providing that certain
                                                    ADDRESSES: Comments on the
                                                                                                                                                                  mammal incidental to reconstructing
                                                                                                            findings are made and the necessary
                                                    application should be addressed to Jolie                                                                      the Skagway ore terminal (SOT) in
                                                                                                            prescriptions are established.
                                                    Harrison, Chief, Permits and                                                                                  Skaway Harbor, Skagway, Alaska,
                                                                                                               The incidental taking of small
                                                    Conservation Division, Office of                                                                              referred to as the Skagway Gateway
                                                                                                            numbers of marine mammals may be
                                                    Protected Resources, National Marine                                                                          Initiative project. On January 22, 2016
                                                                                                            allowed only if NMFS (through
                                                    Fisheries Service. Physical comments                                                                          and March 14, 2016, and March 17,
                                                                                                            authority delegated by the Secretary)
                                                    should be sent to 1315 East-West                                                                              2016 NMFS received revised
                                                                                                            finds that the total taking by the
                                                    Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 and                                                                          applications. NMFS determined that the
                                                                                                            specified activity during the specified
                                                    electronic comments should be sent to                                                                         application was adequate and complete
                                                                                                            time period will (i) have a negligible
                                                    ITP.mccue@noaa.gov.                                                                                           on April 1, 2016. MOS proposes to
                                                                                                            impact on the species or stock(s) and (ii)
                                                       Instructions: NMFS is not responsible                                                                      conduct in-water work that may
                                                                                                            not have an unmitigable adverse impact
                                                    for comments sent by any other method,                                                                        incidentally harass marine mammals
                                                                                                            on the availability of the species or
                                                    to any other address or individual, or                                                                        (i.e., pile driving and removal) at the ore
                                                                                                            stock(s) for subsistence uses (where
                                                    received after the end of the comment                                                                         terminal. Take, by Level B Harassment,
                                                                                                            relevant). Further, the permissible
                                                    period. Comments received                                                                                     of individuals of six species of marine
                                                                                                            methods of taking and requirements
                                                    electronically, including all                                                                                 mammals is anticipated to results from
                                                                                                            pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring
                                                    attachments, must not exceed a 25-                                                                            the specified activity. This IHA would
                                                                                                            and reporting of such taking must be set
                                                    megabyte file size. Attachments to                                                                            be valid from July 1, 2016 through June
                                                                                                            forth, either in specific regulations or in
                                                    electronic comments will be accepted in                                                                       30, 2017.
                                                                                                            an authorization.
                                                    Microsoft Word or Excel or Adobe PDF                       The allowance of such incidental                   Description of the Specified Activity
                                                    file formats only. All comments                         taking under section 101(a)(5)(A), by
                                                    received are a part of the public record                harassment, serious injury, death, or a               Overview
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    and will generally be posted to the                     combination thereof, requires that                      The MOS is seeking an IHA for work
                                                    Internet at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/                   regulations be established.                           that includes demolition of existing in-
                                                    pr/permits/incidental/construction.htm                  Subsequently, a Letter of Authorization               water and over-water infrastructure
                                                    without change. All personal identifying                may be issued pursuant to the                         including in-water removal of timber,
                                                    information (e.g., name, address)                       prescriptions established in such                     steel, and concrete piling; mechanical
                                                    voluntarily submitted by the commenter                  regulations, providing that the level of              dredging of and upland beneficial reuse
                                                    may be publicly accessible. Do not                      taking will be consistent with the                    or disposal of contaminated sediments
                                                    submit confidential business                            findings made for the total taking                    in the Skagway Ore Terminal (SOT)


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                                                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                                                                         26631

                                                    basin of Skagway Harbor; and                                                  To minimize impacts to Hooligan                                             dolphins and catwalks, depending on
                                                    construction of new infrastructure                                          (Thaleichtys pacificus), Pacific herring                                      funding).
                                                    including a bulkhead wall at the                                            (Clupea pallasii), capelin (Mallotus                                             The SOT was constructed in 1968,
                                                    northern end of the Terminal basin, a                                       catervarius), and other forage fish                                           and pier access accommodates vessels
                                                    wharf structure at the western edge of                                      species that are part of the prey base for                                    in the 35,000 DWT class (AIDEA 2008).
                                                    the SOT, an ore loader and supporting                                       many marine mammals including seals,                                          The Port of Skagway has provided key
                                                    infrastructure, seven new or refurbished                                    sea lions, and baleen whales, in-water                                        transportation import/export capacity
                                                    moorage dolphins and associated                                             construction timing has been planned to                                       for the Yukon for over a century. The
                                                    catwalks, and a concrete floating dock                                      avoid major spawning and migration                                            construction activities are designed to
                                                    and associated gangways (or an                                              times (April 1 through May 31).                                               upgrade and enhance current shipping
                                                    additional three moorage dolphins and                                                                                                                     needs and increase the capacity and
                                                                                                                                Specified Geographic Region
                                                    catwalks, depending on funding).                                                                                                                          efficiency of the existing terminal for
                                                    Development of this new infrastructure                                         The proposed activities will occur at                                      shipment and export. It will spring open
                                                    involves a combination of in-water,                                         the SOT located in Skagway Harbor,                                            new international business from cruise
                                                    over-water, and upland work.                                                Alaska, on the Taiya Inlet/Lynn Canal                                         ships, container traffic, mining
                                                      The project’s timing, duration, and                                       water body. The Project is located in                                         resources, and energy production,
                                                    specific types of activities (such as pile                                  Section 26 and 35, T 30 S, R 59 E,                                            revitalizing investment in Skagway, the
                                                    driving and dredging) may result in the                                     Copper River Meridian; United States                                          Port and the Region.
                                                    incidental taking by acoustical                                             Geological Survey Quad Map Skagway                                               Existing structures to be demolished
                                                    harassment of marine mammals                                                B–1; Latitude 59.45 degrees North (N),                                        include the eastern extent of the timber
                                                    protected under the MMPA. The MOS is                                        Longitude 135.31 degrees West (W) (see                                        pier, the ore loader and concrete and
                                                    requesting an IHA for six marine                                            Figure 1 of the MOS’s application).                                           steel foundation, fuel infrastructure
                                                    mammal species: Harbor seal (Phoca                                          Skagway Harbor is located at the                                              (timber dock and piping), the concrete
                                                    viutlina), Steller sea lion (Eumetopias                                     southwestern end of the 2.5-mile-long                                         Alaska Marine Lines (AML) pier, and up
                                                    jubatus), harbor porpoise (Phocoena                                         Skagway River valley. The Skagway                                             to five concrete and steel moorage
                                                    phocoena), Dall’s porpoise                                                  River empties into Taiya Inlet at the                                         dolphins (see sheets 1 and 2 of the
                                                    (Phocoenoides dalli), killer whale                                          head of Lynn Canal, the northernmost                                          MOS’s application). The existing
                                                    (Orcinus orca), and humpback whale                                          fjord on the Inside Passage of the south                                      infrastructure will be demolished using
                                                    (Megaptera novaeangliae), that may                                          coast of Alaska. Pullen Creek empties                                         heavy, land- or water-based (i.e., from a
                                                    occur in the vicinity of the project.                                       into the inlet on the southeast side of                                       barge) equipment. The contractor will
                                                                                                                                the valley.                                                                   be required to implement best
                                                    Dates and Duration                                                                                                                                        management practices (BMPs) to
                                                                                                                                Detailed Description of Activities
                                                      Pile installation and extraction                                                                                                                        minimize environmental impacts from
                                                    associated with the SOT project will                                           The proposed action for this IHA                                           demolition. In total, demolition actions
                                                    begin no sooner than July 01, 2016 and                                      request includes demolition of existing                                       are expected to take 39 days to
                                                    will be completed no later than June 30,                                    in- and overwater infrastructure                                              complete.
                                                    2016 (1 year following IHA issuance).                                       including in-water removal of timber,                                            Demolition of the infrastructure will
                                                    Pile driving activities are proposed to                                     steel, and concrete piling; mechanical                                        generally occur as follows: Above-water
                                                    occur from the end of July to the                                           dredging of and upland beneficial reuse                                       infrastructure, including concrete pads,
                                                    beginning of October 2016 and again in                                      or disposal of contaminated sediments                                         timber decking, pile caps, utilities, and
                                                    March 2017 for a total of about 155                                         in the SOT basin (Terminal basin) of                                          piping will be removed. Timber piles
                                                    hours over the course of approximately                                      Skagway Harbor; and construction of                                           will then be extracted entirely using a
                                                    73 days in 2016 and 2017. Pile removal                                      new infrastructure including a bulkhead                                       vibratory hammer or broken off at the
                                                    will occur in July 2016 and December                                        wall at the northern end of the Terminal                                      mudline if extraction is not practical.
                                                    2016 to January 2017 for a total of about                                   basin, a wharf structure at the western                                       The timber piles will be removed as
                                                    117 hours over the course of                                                edge of the SOT, an ore loader and                                            both a source control measure (i.e.,
                                                    approximately 39 days in 2016 and                                           supporting infrastructure, seven new or                                       through removal of creosote-treated
                                                    2017. Dredging will occur from January                                      refurbished moorage dolphins and                                              timber piles) and as a necessary step to
                                                    through the beginning of March 2017,                                        associated catwalks, and a concrete                                           perform environmental dredging in this
                                                    for a total of about 400 hours over 40                                      floating dock and associated gangways                                         area. Table 1 shows the total number of
                                                    days in the winter of 2017.                                                 (or an additional three moorage                                               piles to be removed during demolition.

                                                                                                          TABLE 1—NUMBER OF PILES TO BE REMOVED VIA DEMOLITION
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Number of        Number of
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Creosote-       steel piles to
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     treated piles to   be removed
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       be removed

                                                    Timber Pier ..............................................................................................................................................................                   400                50
                                                    Ore Loader ...............................................................................................................................................................                     0                50
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    AML Pier ..................................................................................................................................................................                    0                15
                                                    Fuel Infrastructure ....................................................................................................................................................                       0                 4
                                                    Moorage Dolphins2 ..................................................................................................................................................                           0                 0

                                                          Total ..................................................................................................................................................................               400               119




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                                                    26632                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                       The vertical and horizontal                                  and structural considerations, for a total              section, specific overwater structures
                                                    boundaries of the proposed dredging                             surface area of 62,245 ft2 to be removed.               are planned to be demolished prior to
                                                    were designed to remove impacted                                The estimated contaminated material                     the start of dredging. In total, dredging
                                                    sediments (i.e., sediments with metals                          planned to be removed is 17,300 cubic                   actions are expected to take 40 days to
                                                    and/or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon                          yards. An additional 9,000 cubic yards                  complete.
                                                    (PAH) concentrations exceeding the                              of uncontaminated material may be
                                                                                                                                                                               Construction of new in- and
                                                    sediment cleanup objectives [SCOs]).                            dredged for the installation of the
                                                                                                                                                                            overwater infrastructure is proposed,
                                                    The SCOs were chosen to be the                                  floating dock. Pending the outcome of a
                                                                                                                    treatability study, dredged sediments                   including the AML bulkhead wall,
                                                    cleanup objective level based on                                                                                        wharf structure, and ore loader. In
                                                                                                                    will either be beneficially reused in
                                                    discussions in the April 13, 2015,                                                                                      addition, either a concrete floating dock
                                                                                                                    upland areas or transported to a suitable
                                                    meeting between Bruce Wanstall                                                                                          or additional moorage dolphins
                                                                                                                    upland landfill at the discretion of
                                                    (ADEC), Dr. Chad Gubala (MOS), and                              ADEC.                                                   connected by a catwalk will be
                                                    Derek Koellmann (Anchor QEA). The                                  All dredging will be performed using                 constructed. Whether the concrete
                                                    current estimated dredge volume                                 up-to a seven-cubic-yard clamshell                      floating dock or moorage dolphins and
                                                    (including a 1-foot over-dredge to                              bucket. Use of an environmental bucket                  catwalk are constructed depends on
                                                    account for equipment tolerances) is                            was considered, but was deemed                          available funding. All piles will be
                                                    41,000 ft2, and the associated                                  infeasible given the nature and                         installed using a vibratory and/or
                                                    approximate surface area is 21,245 ft2,                         composition of the sediments to be                      impact hammer. Piles to be installed are
                                                    pending final design and geotechnical                           dredged. As noted in the demolitions                    summarized in Table 2.

                                                                                                                      TABLE 2—PILES TO BE INSTALLED
                                                                                                                                                   Pile size and number                                          Square
                                                                   Project component                                                                                                                         footage of sea
                                                                                                                   24 in                36 in                 48 in           60 in            Total          floor impacts

                                                    AML Bulkhead Wall .................................                       0                    0                  0                 0               0                0
                                                    Wharf Structure at Ore Dock ...................                          16                   20                  4                 0              40            241.9
                                                    Ore Loader and Foundation ....................                            0                   58                  0                 0              58            410.0
                                                    Moorage Dolphins and Catwalk ...............                              0                   70                  0                 0              70            494.8
                                                    Fuel Infrastructure ....................................                  0                   17                  0                 0              17            120.2
                                                    Concrete Floating Dock Structure ...........                              3                   14                  0                 7              21            245.8

                                                          Total, Concrete Floating Dock ..........                           19                 179                   4                 7              209          1,512.7



                                                       The proposed wharf bulkhead wall                             MLLW. The ramp will be installed by                     will be a 300-by-50-foot concrete
                                                    will be constructed of steel sheet pile                         crane.                                                  structure supported by seven 60-inch-
                                                    walls in the form of a rectangle of                                A new ore loader is proposed in the                  diameter piles and fourteen 36-inch-
                                                    approximately 220 by 75 feet (16,500                            harbor, including a loader, foundation,                 diameter piles. The finished height will
                                                    square feet). The top of the walls will be                      and access platform. The proposed ore                   vary with the tide; the dock will have
                                                    at approximately 30 feet above MLLW,                            loader foundation will be a steel and                   approximately 7 feet of freeboard above
                                                    and the future bottom of the walls at a                         concrete structure, 50 by 50 feet and                   the waterline. Piles will be installed
                                                    depth of –4 feet MLLW. The structure                            supported by fifty 36-inch-diameter                     with a vibratory and/or impact hammer.
                                                    will be filled with 2,000 to 4,000 cubic                        steel piles. Finished height will be 30                    The proposed transfer bridge will be
                                                    yards of suitable dredged material, of                          feet above MLLW. Piles will be installed                a 200-by-19-foot steel structure
                                                    which 150 to 300 cubic yards will be                            with a vibratory and/or impact hammer.                  supported by a concrete abutment
                                                    placed below MHHW. The ground                                      The proposed access platform will                    founded on ten 24-inch-diameter piles
                                                    surface where fill will be placed is                            connect the ore loader to the Ore                       placed above the intertidal zone. The
                                                    primarily above MHHW. Only fill                                 Terminal uplands. It will be a steel and                top of the ramp will be 30 feet above
                                                    placed in the southeastern corner of the                        concrete structure, 90 by 15 feet, and                  MLLW and the bottom of the ramp will
                                                    structure will be within the intertidal                         supported by twenty 36-inch-diameter                    be supported by the floating dock. Only
                                                    zone. The steel sheet pile will be                              steel piles. Finished height will be 30                 the eastern 150 feet of length will be
                                                    installed using a vibratory and/or                              feet above MLLW. Only the eastern 40                    over the intertidal or subtidal zones (the
                                                    impact hammer.                                                  feet of length and eight piles will be                  remainder will be above and tied into
                                                                                                                    over the intertidal or subtidal zones (the              the uplands). The ramp will be installed
                                                       The proposed AML pier will be a steel                        remainder will be above and tied into                   by crane.
                                                    and concrete structure abutting the new                         the uplands). Piles will be installed with                 The proposed pedestrian platform
                                                    wharf structure. The pier will be 65 by                         a vibratory and/or impact hammer.                       will be a 25-by-55-foot concrete
                                                    30 feet, supported by twenty 36-inch-                              The concrete dock and seven moorage                  structure, placed adjacent to the existing
                                                    diameter steel piles. Finished height                           dolphins (see Section 2.2.4.5 of the                    timber walkway that will remain after
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    will be 30 feet above MLLW. Piles will                          MOS’s application) or up to 10 moorage                  the ore dock demolition. Finished
                                                    be installed with a vibratory and/or                            dolphins will be installed depending on                 height will be 30 feet above MLLW. The
                                                    impact hammer.                                                  funding. A concrete floating dock is                    pedestrian platform will be supported
                                                       The proposed AML ramp will be a                              proposed for the southern end of the                    on six 24-inch-diameter steel piles. Only
                                                    steel ramp of 96 by 23 feet supported by                        project area, including the dock, a                     the eastern 10 feet and three piles of this
                                                    four 48-inch-diameter steel guide piles                         transfer bridge, a pile-supported                       structure will be over the intertidal or
                                                    and sixteen 24-inch-diameter steel piles.                       pedestrian platform, and a pedestrian                   subtidal zones (the remainder will be
                                                    Finished height will be 30 feet above                           gangway. The proposed floating dock                     above and tied into the uplands).


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                                                    26633

                                                       The proposed pedestrian gangway                      supported by eight 36-inch-diameter                         deeper waters, and are unlikely to occur
                                                    will be a 150-by-8-foot steel structure                 steel piles. The fuel pier will be 30 by                    in the narrow inlets near Skagway. Gray
                                                    that spans between the pedestrian                       30 feet supported by nine 36-inch-                          whale sightings in the portion of
                                                    platform and the concrete floating dock.                diameter steel piles. Finished height                       Southeast Alaska are very rare; there
                                                    The top of the ramp will be 30 feet                     will be 30 feet above MLLW. Piles will                      have only been eight sightings since
                                                    above MLLW and the bottom of the                        be installed with a vibratory and/or                        1997, none of which were in Taiya Inlet
                                                    ramp will be supported by the floating                  impact hammer.                                              or Lynn Canal. Pacific white-sided are
                                                    dock. The full length of the pedestrian                                                                             also considered rare in the action area,
                                                                                                            Description of Marine Mammals in the
                                                    gangway will be over the intertidal or                                                                              with habitat preferences in southern
                                                                                                            Area of the Specified Activity
                                                    subtidal zones. It will be installed by                                                                             waters of southeast Alaska. While minke
                                                    crane.                                                     Marine waters near Skagway in the
                                                                                                            Taiya inlet and the larger Lynn Canal                       whales may occur in the action area, our
                                                       As many as 10 new moorage dolphins
                                                                                                            support many species of marine                              analysis and take calculation suggest
                                                    may be constructed, along with
                                                    connecting catwalks, located as follows:                mammals, including pinnipeds and                            that this species will not be taken for
                                                       • Up to two dolphins and a catwalk                   cetaceans; however, the number of                           this activity (zero calculated take);
                                                    200 by 6 feet extending from the AML                    species that may regularly occur near                       therefore, no take of this species will be
                                                    bulkhead wall toward the AML ramp;                      the project area is 10 marine mammal                        authorized. There are six marine
                                                       • Up to five dolphins and a catwalk                  species (Table 3). For the purpose of this                  mammal species documented in the
                                                    400 by 6 feet extending north and south                 IHA, the region of activity is defined as                   waters of Taiya Inlet/Lynn Canal
                                                    from the ore loader; and                                Taiya Inlet as acoustic impacts from the                    (Dahlheim et al. 2009; Allen and Angliss
                                                       • Up to three dolphins and a catwalk                 project are not anticipated to extend                       2014; Muto and Angliss 2015) for which
                                                    300 by 6 feet north of the existing                     beyond the inlet into the adjacent Lynn                     take is requested.
                                                    concrete pier, if the concrete floating                 Canal. Some species in this area are not
                                                                                                                                                                           One of the species, the harbor seal, is
                                                    dock is not constructed.                                expected to be impacted by the project
                                                                                                                                                                        known to consistently occur near the
                                                       Each dolphin will consist of a 15-foot-              activities, due to habitat preference
                                                                                                            including the gray whale, sperm whale,                      SOT; however the closest haul out site
                                                    square steel and concrete superstructure
                                                                                                            and the Pacific white-sided dolphin,                        is six miles away. Moderate to high
                                                    atop ten 36-inch steel piles.
                                                       Each catwalk will be a 6-foot-wide                   and are therefore not considered further                    abundances of Steller sea lions are also
                                                    steel structure, supported by the                       in this document after this section.                        known to seasonally occupy the inlet,
                                                    dolphins. Finished height will be 30 feet               Sperm whales have been observed in                          with the closest haul out more than 22
                                                    above MLLW. Dolphins will be installed                  southeast Alaska with more frequency                        miles away from construction activities.
                                                    by vibratory and/or impact hammer and                   in recent years and have been tracked in                    Several humpback whales have been
                                                    the catwalk will be installed by crane.                 Lynn Canal (seaswap.info). It is                            observed within Taiya Inlet, sometimes
                                                       A new fuel manifold and fuel lines                   unknown whether they occur as far                           close to Skagway, during non-winter
                                                    will be constructed on a pier extending                 north as Taiya inlet and the action area                    months. The remaining four species
                                                    from the ore loader platform                            (J. Moran personal communication,                           (harbor porpoise, Dall’s porpoise, killer
                                                    infrastructure. The proposed fuel pier                  March 2016); however, there are no                          whale, and minke whale) may occur in
                                                    will be a steel and concrete structure.                 documented sightings in the area                            Taiya Inlet/Lynn Canal, but less
                                                    The approach pier will be 60 by 15 feet,                (seaswap.info). This species prefers                        frequently and farther from the SOT.

                                                                              TABLE 3—MARINE MAMMAL SPECIES LIKELY TO OCCUR NEAR THE PROJECT AREA

                                                                                                              Stock(s) abundance
                                                                     Species name                                                                 ESA * status                   MMPA ** status                     Occurrence
                                                                                                                   estimate 1

                                                                                           Order Cetartiodactyla—Cetacea—Superfamily Mysticeti (baleen whales)

                                                                                                                        Family Balaenopteridae

                                                    Humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae)              Central North Pacific Stock:           Endangered ......       Strategic, depleted ................       Rare.
                                                                                                           10,252.
                                                    Minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) ...         Alaska stock: N/A ..................   Not listed ..........   Not strategic ..........................   Unlikely.

                                                                                                           Order Cetartiodactyla—Cetacea—Superfamily

                                                                                                                          Family Eschrichtiidae

                                                    Gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus) ..............    Eastern North Pacific stock:           Not listed ..........   Not strategic, non-depleted ...            Unlikely.
                                                                                                           20,990.

                                                                                                           Order Cetartiodactyla—Cetacea—Superfamily
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                                          Family Physeteroidea

                                                    Sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) ......          North Pacific stock: N/A ........      Endangered ......       Strategic, depleted ................       Unlikely.




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                                                    26634                               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                                       TABLE 3—MARINE MAMMAL SPECIES LIKELY TO OCCUR NEAR THE PROJECT AREA—Continued
                                                                                                                    Stock(s) abundance
                                                                       Species name                                                                     ESA * status                  MMPA ** status                   Occurrence
                                                                                                                         estimate 1

                                                                                                                Order Cetartiodactyla—Cetacea—Superfamily

                                                                                                                                 Family Delphinidae

                                                    Killer whale (Orcinus orca) ............................   Alaska stock: 2,347 ...............    Not listed ..........   Not Strategic, non-depleted ..         Infrequent.
                                                                                                               Northern resident stock: 261
                                                                                                               Gulf of Alaska stock: 587 ......
                                                                                                               West coast transient stock:
                                                                                                                 243.
                                                    Pacific white-sided dolphin (Lagenorhynchus                North Pacific stock: 26,880 ...        Not listed ..........   Not Strategic, non-depleted ..         Unlikely.
                                                      obliquidens).

                                                                                                                Order Cetartiodactyla—Cetacea—Superfamily

                                                                                                                                Family Phocoenidae

                                                    Dall’s porpoise (Phocoenoides dalli) .............         Alaska stock: 83,400 .............     Not listed ..........   Not strategic, non-depleted ...        Rare.
                                                    Harbor porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) ........               Southeast AK: 11,146 ...........       Not listed ..........   Strategic, non-depleted .........      Likely.

                                                                                                                           Order Carnivora—Pinnipedia

                                                                                                                                   Family Phocidae

                                                    Harbor seal (Phoca vitulina) .........................     Lynn Canal/Stephens Pas-               Not listed ..........   Not strategic- non-depleted ..         Likely.
                                                                                                                 sage Stock: 9,478.

                                                                                                                           Order Carnivora—Pinnipedia

                                                                                                                                   Family Otariidae

                                                    Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) ...........          wDPS:49,497 ........................   Endangered ......       Strategic, depleted ................   Likely.
                                                                                                               eDPS: 60,131–74,448 ...........
                                                       1 2015 draft marine mammal Stock Assessment Reports at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/sars/species.htm.
                                                       * Endangered Species Act.
                                                       ** Marine Mammal Protection Act.


                                                    Cetaceans                                                    from southern Mexico into Central                            distribution and movements in the
                                                                                                                 America, including Guatemala, El                             North Pacific; however, the full
                                                    Humpback whale
                                                                                                                 Salvador, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica                          SPLASH results suggest the current
                                                       The humpback whale is distributed                         (Calambokidis et al., 2008).                                 view of population structure is
                                                    worldwide in all ocean basins. In                                                                                         incomplete. A revision of population
                                                    winter, most humpback whales occur in                           There are three stocks of humpback
                                                                                                                 whales in the North Pacific: (1) The                         structure in the North Pacific will be
                                                    the subtropical and tropical waters of                                                                                    considered when the full genetic results
                                                    the Northern and Southern                                    California/Oregon/Washington and
                                                                                                                 Mexico stock, consisting of winter/                          from the SPLASH project are available.
                                                    Hemispheres, and migrate to high                                                                                          The central North Pacific stock is the
                                                    latitudes in the summer to feed. The                         spring populations in coastal Central
                                                                                                                 America and coastal Mexico which                             only stock that is found near the project
                                                    historic summer feeding range of                                                                                          activities.
                                                    humpback whales in the North Pacific                         migrate to the coast of California to
                                                    encompassed coastal and inland waters                        southern British Columbia in summer/                            The current abundance estimate for
                                                    around the Pacific Rim from Point                            fall (Calambokidis et al. 1989, Steiger et                   the Central North Pacific stock is 10,252
                                                    Conception, California, north to the Gulf                    al. 1991, Calambokidis et al. 1993); (2)                     individuals (Muto and Angliss, 2015).
                                                    of Alaska and the Bering Sea, and west                       the central North Pacific stock,                             This stock is designated as strategic and
                                                    along the Aleutian Islands to the                            consisting of winter/spring populations                      depleted under the MMPA. Humpback
                                                    Kamchatka Peninsula and into the Sea                         of the Hawaiian Islands which migrate                        whales are currently listed as
                                                    of Okhotsk and north of the Bering                           primarily to northern British Columbia/                      endangered range-wide under the ESA.
                                                    Strait (Zenkovich 1954, Johnson and                          Southeast Alaska, the Gulf of Alaska,                        The status and population structure of
                                                    Wolman 1984). The winter range                               and the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands                          humpback whales is currently under
                                                    includes the main islands of the                             (Perry et al. 1990, Calambokidis et al.                      review by NMFS as part of a global
                                                    Hawaiian archipelago, with the greatest                      1997); and (3) the western North Pacific                     status review of the species (Muto and
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    concentration along the west side of                         stock, consisting of winter/spring                           Angliss, 2015). This stock of humpback
                                                    Maui. In Mexico, the winter range                            populations off Asia which migrate                           whales is growing, with the growth rate
                                                    includes waters around the southern                          primarily to Russia and the Bering Sea/                      estimated to be seven percent (Allen
                                                    part of the Baja California peninsula, the                   Aleutian Islands. Information from the                       and Angliss, 2014). The current PBR for
                                                    central portions of the Pacific coast of                     SPLASH (Structure of Populations,                            this stock is 173 individuals.
                                                    mainland Mexico, and the                                     Levels of Abundance, and Status of                           Entanglement from fishing gear and ship
                                                    Revillagigedos Islands off the mainland                      Humpbacks) project mostly confirms                           strikes remain the top threats for
                                                    coast. The winter range also extends                         this view of humpback whale                                  humpback whales, with an estimated


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                            26635

                                                    annual mortality and serious injury rate                southeastern Alaska (Dahlheim et al.,                 that separate stocks will emerge when
                                                    of 23 animals (Muto and Angliss, 2015).                 1997; Ford et al., 2000). The population              data become available.
                                                                                                            estimate for this stock is currently 261                 Currently one stock of Dall’s porpoise
                                                    Killer Whale
                                                                                                            whales (Allen and Angliss, 2013). This                is recognized in Alaskan waters, while
                                                       Killer whales have been observed in                  population is increasing, with an
                                                    all oceans and seas of the world, but the                                                                     Dall’s porpoise along the west coast of
                                                                                                            average of 2.1 percent annual increase
                                                    highest densities occur in colder and                                                                         the continental U.S. from California to
                                                                                                            over a 36 year time period (Ellis et al.,
                                                    more productive waters found at high                    2011). PBR for this stock is 1.96                     Washington comprise a separate stock
                                                    latitudes. Killer whales are found                      animals. This stock is not designated as              (Allen and Angliss, 2012). The current
                                                    throughout the North Pacific, and occur                 depleted or strategic under the MMPA,                 abundance estimate for the Alaska stock
                                                    along the entire Alaska coast, in British               and is not listed as threatened or                    is 83,400 animals (Muto and Angliss,
                                                    Columbia and Washington inland                          endangered under the ESA.                             2015). PBR for this stock is currently
                                                    waterways, and along the outer coasts of                   The Gulf of Alaska transient stock                 undetermined, and population trends
                                                    Washington, Oregon, and California                      occurs mainly from Prince William                     are unknown; however, this stock is not
                                                    (Allen and Angliss, 2013).                              Sound through the Aleutian Islands and                designated as depleted or strategic
                                                       Based on data regarding association                  Bering Sea. Current abundance estimate                under the MMPA, and is not listed
                                                    patterns, acoustics, movements, and                     for this stock is 587 animals (Allen and              under the ESA (Allen and Angliss,
                                                    genetic differences, eight killer whale                 Angliss, 2013). PBR is 5.87 animals per               2012).
                                                    stocks are now recognized: (1) The                      year (Allen and Angliss, 2013). Current
                                                    Alaska Resident stock; (2) the Northern                 trends for this stock are unavailable, but            Harbor Porpoise
                                                    Resident stock; (3) the Southern                        the stock is not designated as depleted
                                                    Resident stock; (4) the Gulf of Alaska,                                                                          The harbor porpoise inhabits
                                                                                                            or strategic under the MMPA and is not
                                                    Aleutian Islands, and Bering Sea                                                                              temporal, subarctic, and arctic waters.
                                                                                                            listed under the ESA.
                                                    Transient stock; (5) the AT1 Transient                     The West coast transient stock                     In the eastern North Pacific, harbor
                                                    stock; (6) the West Coast transient stock,              includes animals that occur in                        porpoises range from Point Barrow,
                                                    occurring from California through                       California, Oregon, Washington, British               Alaska, to Point Conception, California.
                                                    southeastern Alaska; and (7) the                        Columbia and southeastern Alaska.                     Harbor porpoise primarily frequent
                                                    Offshore stock, and (8) the Hawaiian                    Current abundance estimate for this                   coastal waters and occur most
                                                    stock. Only the Alaska resident;                        stock is 243 animals, which should be                 frequently in waters less than 100 m
                                                    Northern resident; Gulf of Alaska,                      considered a minimum count for this                   deep (Hobbs and Waite 2010). They may
                                                    Aleutian Islands, and Bering Sea                        stock (Allen and Angliss, 2013). PBR is               occasionally be found in deeper offshore
                                                    Transient (Gulf of Alaska transient); and               2.4 animals per year (Allen and Angliss,              waters.
                                                    the West coast transient stocks are                     2013). No reliable estimates of                          In Alaska, harbor porpoises are
                                                    considered in this application because                  population trends are available, but this
                                                    other stocks occur outside the                                                                                currently divided into three stocks,
                                                                                                            stock is not designated as depleted or
                                                    geographic area under consideration.                                                                          based primarily on geography. These are
                                                                                                            strategic under the MMPA, and is not
                                                    Any of these four stocks could be seen                  listed under the ESA.                                 (1) the Southeast Alaska stock—
                                                    in the action area; however, the                           Additional information on the biology              occurring from the northern border of
                                                    Northern resident stock is most likely to               and local distribution of these species               British Columbia to Cape Suckling,
                                                    occur in the area.                                      can be found in the NMFS Marine                       Alaska, (2) the Gulf of Alaska stock—
                                                       The Alaska resident stock is found                   Mammal Stock Assessment Reports,                      occurring from Cape Suckling to
                                                    from southeastern Alaska to the                         which may be found at: http://                        Unimak Pass, and (3) the Bering Sea
                                                    Aleutian Islands and Bering Sea.                        www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/.                        stock—occurring throughout the
                                                    Intermixing of Alaska residents have                                                                          Aleutian Islands and all waters north of
                                                    been documented among the three                         Dall’s Porpoise
                                                                                                                                                                  Unimak Pass (Allen and Angliss 2014).
                                                    areas, at least as far west as the eastern                 Dall’s porpoise are widely distributed             Only the Southeast Alaska stock is
                                                    Aleutian Islands (Allen and Angliss,                    across the entire North Pacific Ocean.                considered in this application because
                                                    2013). Combining the counts of known                    They are found over the continental                   the other stocks are not found in the
                                                    ‘resident’ whales gives a minimum                       shelf adjacent to the slope and over                  geographic area under consideration.
                                                    number of 2,347 (Southeast Alaska +                     deep (2,500+ m) oceanic waters. They
                                                    Prince William Sound + Western                          have been sighted throughout the North                   Harbor porpoises are neither
                                                    Alaska; 121 + 751 + 1,475) killer whales                Pacific as far north as 65° N. (Buckland              designated as depleted under the
                                                    belonging to the Alaska Resident stock                  et al. 1993). Throughout most of the                  MMPA nor listed as threatened or
                                                    (Allen and Angliss 2013). At present,                   eastern North Pacific they are present                endangered under the ESA. Because the
                                                    reliable data on trends in population                   during all months of the year, although               most recent abundance estimate is 14
                                                    abundance for the entire Alaska resident                there may be seasonal onshore-offshore                years old and information on incidental
                                                    stock of killer whales are unavailable.                 movements along the west coast of the                 harbor porpoise mortality in commercial
                                                    PBR is 23.4 animals. Fishery                            continental United States (Loeb 1972),                fisheries is not well understood, the
                                                    interactions are a main threat to this                  and winter movements of populations                   Southeast Alaska stock of harbor
                                                    stock. This stock is not designated as                  out of Prince William Sound and areas                 porpoise is classified as strategic.
                                                    depleted or classified as strategic under               in the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea                  Population trends and status of this
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    the MMPA, and is not listed under the                   (NMFS, unpubl. data, National Marine                  stock relative to optimum sustainable
                                                    ESA.                                                    Mammal Laboratory). The stock                         population size are currently unknown.
                                                       The Northern resident stock occurs                   structure of eastern North Pacific Dall’s             The Southeast Alaska stock is currently
                                                    from Washington State through part of                   porpoise is not adequately understood                 estimated at 11,146 individuals (Muto
                                                    southeastern Alaska. The Northern                       at this time, but based on patterns of                and Angliss 2015). No reliable
                                                    Resident stock is a transboundary stock,                stock differentiation in the western                  information is available to determine
                                                    and includes killer whales that frequent                North Pacific, where they have been                   trends in abundance.
                                                    British Columbia, Canada and                            more intensively studied, it is expected


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                                                    26636                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    Pinnipeds                                               seals are not listed as depleted or                   standardized surveys began in the
                                                                                                            strategic under the MMPA, and are not                 1970s, and were due to increased or
                                                    Harbor Seal
                                                                                                            listed under the ESA.                                 stable counts in all regions except the
                                                       Harbor seals range from Baja                                                                               western Aleutian Islands. During 2004–
                                                    California north along the west coasts of               Steller Sea Lion
                                                                                                                                                                  2008, western Alaska non-pup counts
                                                    Washington, Oregon, California, British                    The Steller sea lion is a pinniped and             increased only 3 percent; eastern Gulf of
                                                    Columbia, and Southeast Alaska; west                    the largest of the eared seals. Steller sea           Alaska (Prince William Sound area)
                                                    through the Gulf of Alaska, Prince                      lion populations that primarily occur                 counts were higher; counts from the
                                                    William Sound, and the Aleutian                         west of 144° W. (Cape Suckling, Alaska)               Kenai Peninsula through Kiska Island,
                                                    Islands; and north in the Bering Sea to                 comprise the western Distinct                         including Kodiak Island, were stable;
                                                    Cape Newenham and the Pribilof                          Population Segment (wDPS), while all                  and western Aleutian counts continued
                                                    Islands. They haul out on rocks, reefs,                 others comprise the eastern DPS (eDPS);               to decline (Allen and Angliss 2010).
                                                    beaches, and drifting glacial ice, and                  however, there is regular movement of                 Current PBR for the wDPS is 297
                                                    feed in marine, estuarine, and                          both DPSs across this boundary (Muto                  animals, and PBR for the eDPS is
                                                    occasionally fresh waters. Harbor seals                 and Angliss, 2015). Both of these                     currently unavailable (Muto and
                                                    generally are nonmigratory, with local                  populations may occur in the action                   Angliss, 2015).
                                                    movements associated with such factors                  area. Steller sea lions were listed as                   Steller sea lions are included in
                                                    as tides, weather, season, food                         threatened range-wide under the ESA                   Alaska subsistence harvests. The mean
                                                    availability, and reproduction (Scheffer                on 26 November 1990 (55 Federal                       annual take of Steller sea lions is 199
                                                    and Slipp 1944, Fisher 1952, Bigg 1969,                 Register [FR] 49204). Steller sea lions               from 2004–2013 (Muto and Angliss,
                                                    1981, Hastings et al. 2004).                            were subsequently partitioned into the                2015). Entanglements in fishing gear
                                                       In 2010, harbor seals in Alaska were                 western and eastern DPSs in 1997                      and marine debris, and interactions
                                                    partitioned into 12 separate stocks based               (Allen and Angliss 2010), with the                    with fishing gear are sources of
                                                    largely on genetic structure (Allen and                 wDPS being listed as endangered under                 mortality and serious injury for Steller
                                                    Angliss 2012). The 12 stocks of harbor                  the ESA and the eDPS remaining                        sea lions.
                                                    seals identified in Alaska are (1) the                  classified as threatened (62 FR 24345)
                                                    Aleutian Islands stock, (2) the Pribilof                until it was delisted in November 2013.               Potential Effects of the Specified
                                                    Islands stock, (3) the Bristol Bay stock,               In August 1993, NMFS published a final                Activity on Marine Mammals and Their
                                                    (4) the North Kodiak stock, (5) the South               rule designating critical habitat for the             Habitat
                                                    Kodiak stock, (6) the Prince William                    Steller sea lion as a 20 nautical mile                   This section includes a summary and
                                                    Sound stock, (7) the Cook Inlet/Shelikof                buffer around all major haul-outs and                 discussion of the ways that the specified
                                                    stock, (8) the Glacier Bay/Icy Strait                   rookeries, as well as associated                      activity (e.g. pile driving, pile removal),
                                                    stock, (9) the Lynn Canal/Stephens                      terrestrial, air and aquatic zones, and               including potential mitigation activities,
                                                    Passage stock, (10) the Sitka/Chatham                   three large offshore foraging areas (50               associated with the reconstruction of the
                                                    stock, (11) the Dixon/Cape Decision                     CFR 226.202). There is no Steller sea                 SOT may impact marine mammals and
                                                    stock, and (12) the Clarence Strait stock.              lion critical habitat in the area.                    their habitat. Mitigation measures will
                                                    Only the Lynn Canal/Stephens stock is                      The range of the Steller sea lion                  reduce impacts to marine mammals
                                                    considered for these construction                       includes the North Pacific Ocean rim                  from the project activities. Please refer
                                                    activities. The range of this stock ranges              from California to northern Japan, with               to the Proposed Mitigation section for
                                                    north along the east and north coast of                 centers of abundance and distribution in              more information. The Estimated Take
                                                    Admiralty Island from the north end of                  the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands               by Incidental Harassment section later
                                                    Kupreanof Island through Lynn Canal,                    (Muto and Angliss, 2015). Steller sea                 in this document will include an
                                                    including Taku Inlet, Tracy Arm, and                    lions forage in nearshore and pelagic                 analysis of the number of individuals
                                                    Endicott Arm, and reaching as far north                 waters where they are opportunistic                   that are expected to be taken by this
                                                    as Taiya, Lutak, and Chilkat Inlets                     predators. They feed primarily on a                   activity. The Negligible Impact Analysis
                                                    (Allen and Angliss, 2012).                              wide variety of fishes and cephalopods.               section will include the analysis of how
                                                       The current statewide abundance                      Steller sea lions use terrestrial haulout             this specific activity will impact marine
                                                    estimate for Alaskan harbor seals is                    sites to rest and take refuge. They also              mammals and will consider the content
                                                    205,090, based on aerial survey data                    gather on well-defined, traditionally                 of this section, the Estimated Take by
                                                    collected during 1998–2011 (Muto and                    used rookeries to pup and breed. These                Incidental Harassment section, and the
                                                    Angliss, 2015). The abundance estimate                  habitats are typically gravel, rocky, or              Proposed Mitigation section to draw
                                                    for the Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage                     sand beaches; ledges; or rocky reefs                  conclusions regarding the likely impacts
                                                    stock is 9,478 (Muto and Angliss 2015).                 (Allen and Angliss, 2013).                            of this activity on the reproductive
                                                    The current (2007–2011) estimate of the                    The current abundance estimate for                 success or survivorship of individuals
                                                    population trend information for this                   the wDPS in Alaska is 49,497 sea lions,               and from that on the affected marine
                                                    stock is ¥176 seals per year, with a                    and between 60,131–74,448 animals for                 mammal populations or stocks. In the
                                                    probability that the stock is decreasing                the eDPS (Muto and Angliss 2015). The                 following discussion, we provide
                                                    (Muto and Angliss, 2015). PBR is 155                    wDPS of Steller sea lions declined                    general background information on
                                                    animals per year.                                       approximately 75 percent from 1976 to                 sound and marine mammal hearing
                                                       Harbor seals are included in                         1990. Factors that may have contributed               before considering potential effects to
                                                    subsistence harvests. From 2011–2012,                   to this decline include (1) incidental
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                                                                                  marine mammals from sound produced
                                                    an average of 50 animals from this stock                take in fisheries, (2) legal and illegal              by pile extraction, vibratory pile
                                                    were harvested each year, which is                      shooting, (3) predation, (4)                          driving, and impact pile driving.
                                                    higher than previous estimates of 30                    contaminants, (5) disease, and (6)
                                                    animals, on average, per year from                      climate change. Non-pup Steller sea lion              Description of Sound Sources
                                                    2004–2008 (Muto and Angliss, 2015).                     counts at trend sites in the wDPS                       Sound travels in waves, the basic
                                                    Entanglement is the biggest contributor                 increased 11 percent during 2000–2004.                components of which are frequency,
                                                    to their annual human-caused mortality.                 These counts were the first region-wide               wavelength, velocity, and amplitude.
                                                    Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage harbor                      increases for the wDPS since                          Frequency is the number of pressure


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                             26637

                                                    waves that pass by a reference point per                   Even in the absence of sound from the              comprise ‘‘ambient’’ or ‘‘background’’
                                                    unit of time and is measured in hertz                   specified activity, the underwater                    sound—depends not only on the source
                                                    (Hz) or cycles per second. Wavelength is                environment is typically loud due to                  levels (as determined by current
                                                    the distance between two peaks of a                     ambient sound. Ambient sound is                       weather conditions and levels of
                                                    sound wave; lower frequency sounds                      defined as environmental background                   biological and shipping activity) but
                                                    have longer wavelengths than higher                     sound levels lacking a single source or               also on the ability of sound to propagate
                                                    frequency sounds and attenuate                          point (Richardson et al., 1995), and the              through the environment. In turn, sound
                                                    (decrease) more rapidly in shallower                    sound level of a region is defined by the             propagation is dependent on the
                                                    water. Amplitude is the height of the                   total acoustical energy being generated               spatially and temporally varying
                                                    sound pressure wave or the ‘loudness’                   by known and unknown sources. These                   properties of the water column and sea
                                                    of a sound and is typically measured                    sources may include physical (e.g.,                   floor, and is frequency-dependent. As a
                                                    using the decibel (dB) scale. A dB is the               waves, earthquakes, ice, atmospheric                  result of the dependence on a large
                                                    ratio between a measured pressure (with                 sound), biological (e.g., sounds                      number of varying factors, ambient
                                                    sound) and a reference pressure (sound                  produced by marine mammals, fish, and                 sound levels can be expected to vary
                                                    at a constant pressure, established by                  invertebrates), and anthropogenic sound               widely over both coarse and fine spatial
                                                    scientific standards). It is a logarithmic              (e.g., vessels, dredging, aircraft,                   and temporal scales. Sound levels at a
                                                    unit that accounts for large variations in              construction). A number of sources                    given frequency and location can vary
                                                    amplitude; therefore, relatively small                  contribute to ambient sound, including                by 10–20 dB from day to day
                                                    changes in dB ratings correspond to                     the following (Richardson et al., 1995):              (Richardson et al., 1995). The result is
                                                    large changes in sound pressure. When                      • Wind and waves: The complex                      that, depending on the source type and
                                                    referring to sound pressure levels (SPLs;               interactions between wind and water                   its intensity, sound from the specified
                                                    the sound force per unit area), sound is                surface, including processes such as                  activity may be a negligible addition to
                                                    referenced in the context of underwater                 breaking waves and wave-induced                       the local environment or could form a
                                                    sound pressure to 1 microPascal (mPa).                  bubble oscillations and cavitation, are a             distinctive signal that may affect marine
                                                    One pascal is the pressure resulting                    main source of naturally occurring                    mammals.
                                                    from a force of one newton exerted over                 ambient noise for frequencies between                    The underwater acoustic environment
                                                    an area of one square meter. The source                 200 Hz and 50 kHz (Mitson, 1995). In                  in the SOT is likely to be dominated by
                                                    level (SL) represents the sound level at                general, ambient sound levels tend to                 noise from day-to-day port and vessel
                                                    a distance of 1 m from the source                       increase with increasing wind speed                   activities. The Port of Skagway has
                                                    (referenced to 1 mPa). The received level               and wave height. Surf noise becomes                   provided key transportation import/
                                                    is the sound level at the listener’s                    important near shore, with                            export capacity for the Yukon and pier
                                                    position. Note that all underwater sound                measurements collected at a distance of               access accommodates vessels in the
                                                    levels in this document are referenced                  8.5 km from shore showing an increase                 35,000 DWT class (AIDEA 2008). When
                                                    to a pressure of 1 mPa and all airborne                 of 10 dB in the 100 to 700 Hz band                    underway, these sources can create
                                                    sound levels in this document are                       during heavy surf conditions.                         noise between 20 Hz and 16 kHz (Lesage
                                                                                                               • Precipitation: Sound from rain and               et al., 1999), with broadband noise
                                                    referenced to a pressure of 20 mPa.
                                                                                                            hail impacting the water surface can                  levels up to 180 dB. While there are no
                                                       Root mean square (rms) is the                        become an important component of total                current measurements of ambient noise
                                                    quadratic mean sound pressure over the                  noise at frequencies above 500 Hz, and                levels in harbor, it is likely that levels
                                                    duration of an impulse. Rms is                          possibly down to 100 Hz during quiet                  within the harbor periodically exceed
                                                    calculated by squaring all of the sound                 times.                                                the 120 dB threshold and, therefore, that
                                                    amplitudes, averaging the squares, and                     • Biological: Marine mammals can                   the high levels of anthropogenic activity
                                                    then taking the square root of the                      contribute significantly to ambient noise             in the basin create an environment far
                                                    average (Urick, 1983). Rms accounts for                 levels, as can some fish and shrimp. The              different from quieter habitats where
                                                    both positive and negative values;                      frequency band for biological                         behavioral reactions to sounds around
                                                    squaring the pressures makes all values                 contributions is from approximately 12                the 120 dB threshold have been
                                                    positive so that they may be accounted                  Hz to over 100 kHz.                                   observed (e.g., Malme et al., 1984,
                                                    for in the summation of pressure levels                    • Anthropogenic: Sources of ambient                1987).
                                                    (Hastings and Popper, 2005). This                       noise related to human activity include                  High levels of vessel traffic are known
                                                    measurement is often used in the                        transportation (surface vessels and                   to elevate background levels of noise in
                                                    context of discussing behavioral effects,               aircraft), dredging and construction, oil             the marine environment. For example,
                                                    in part because behavioral effects,                     and gas drilling and production, seismic              continuous sounds for tugs pulling
                                                    which often result from auditory cues,                  surveys, sonar, explosions, and ocean                 barges have been reported to range from
                                                    may be better expressed through                         acoustic studies. Shipping noise                      145 to 166 dB re 1 mPa rms at 1 meter
                                                    averaged units than by peak pressures.                  typically dominates the total ambient                 from the source (Miles et al. 1987;
                                                       When underwater objects vibrate or                   noise for frequencies between 20 and                  Richardson et al. 1995; Simmonds et al.
                                                    activity occurs, sound-pressure waves                   300 Hz. In general, the frequencies of                2004). Ambient underwater noise levels
                                                    are created. These waves alternately                    anthropogenic sounds are below 1 kHz                  in the SOT project area are both variable
                                                    compress and decompress the water as                    and, if higher frequency sound levels                 and relatively high, and are expected to
                                                    the sound wave travels. Underwater                      are created, they attenuate rapidly                   mask some sounds of drilling, pile
                                                    sound waves radiate in all directions                   (Richardson et al., 1995). Sound from                 installation, and pile extraction.
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    away from the source (similar to ripples                identifiable anthropogenic sources other                 In-water construction activities
                                                    on the surface of a pond), except in                    than the activity of interest (e.g., a                associated with the project include
                                                    cases where the source is directional.                  passing vessel) is sometimes termed                   vibratory pile driving and removal, and
                                                    The compressions and decompressions                     background sound, as opposed to                       impact pile driving. There are two
                                                    associated with sound waves are                         ambient sound.                                        general categories of sound types:
                                                    detected as changes in pressure by                         The sum of the various natural and                 Impulse and non-pulse (defined below).
                                                    aquatic life and man-made sound                         anthropogenic sound sources at any                    Vibratory pile driving is considered to
                                                    receptors such as hydrophones.                          given location and time—which                         be continuous or non-pulsed while


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                                                    26638                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    impact pile driving is considered to be                   The likely or possible impacts of the               Pacini et al., 2010, 2011; Schlundt et al.,
                                                    an impulse or pulsed sound type. The                    proposed pile driving program at SOT                  2011);
                                                    distinction between these two sound                     on marine mammals could involve both                     • High frequency cetaceans (eight
                                                    types is important because they have                    non-acoustic and acoustic stressors.                  species of true porpoises, six species of
                                                    differing potential to cause physical                   Potential non-acoustic stressors could                river dolphins, and members of the
                                                    effects, particularly with regard to                    result from the physical presence of the              genera Kogia and Cephalorhynchus;
                                                    hearing (e.g., Ward, 1997 in Southall et                equipment and personnel. Any impacts                  now considered to include two
                                                    al., 2007). Please see Southall et al.,                 to marine mammals are expected to                     members of the genus Lagenorhynchus
                                                    (2007) for an in-depth discussion of                    primarily be acoustic in nature.                      on the basis of recent echolocation data
                                                    these concepts.                                         Acoustic stressors could include effects              and genetic data [May-Collado and
                                                       Pulsed sound sources (e.g.,                          of heavy equipment operation, pile                    Agnarsson, 2006; Kyhn et al. 2009,
                                                    explosions, gunshots, sonic booms,                      installation and pile removal at SOT.                 2010; Tougaard et al. 2010]): Functional
                                                    impact pile driving) produce signals                    Marine Mammal Hearing                                 hearing is estimated to occur between
                                                    that are brief (typically considered to be                                                                    approximately 200 Hz and 180 kHz
                                                    less than one second), broadband, atonal                   Hearing is the most important sensory              (Popov and Supin, 1990a,b; Kastelein et
                                                    transients (ANSI, 1986; Harris, 1998;                   modality for marine mammals, and
                                                                                                                                                                  al., 2002; Popov et al., 2005);
                                                    NIOSH, 1998; ISO, 2003; ANSI, 2005)                     exposure to sound can have deleterious
                                                    and occur either as isolated events or                  effects. To appropriately assess these                   • Phocid pinnipeds in water:
                                                    repeated in some succession. Pulsed                     potential effects, it is necessary to                 Functional hearing is estimated to occur
                                                    sounds are all characterized by a                       understand the frequency ranges marine                between approximately 75 Hz and 100
                                                    relatively rapid rise from ambient                      mammals are able to hear. Current data                kHz with best hearing between 1–50
                                                    pressure to a maximal pressure value                    indicate that not all marine mammal                   kHz (M<hl, 1968; Terhune and Ronald,
                                                    followed by a rapid decay period that                   species have equal hearing capabilities               1971, 1972; Richardson et al., 1995;
                                                    may include a period of diminishing,                    (e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok               Kastak and Schusterman, 1999;
                                                    oscillating maximal and minimal                         and Ketten, 1999; Au and Hastings,                    Reichmuth, 2008; Kastelein et al., 2009);
                                                    pressures, and generally have an                        2008). To reflect this, Southall et al.               and
                                                    increased capacity to induce physical                   (2007) recommended that marine                           • Otariid pinnipeds in water:
                                                    injury as compared with sounds that                     mammals be divided into functional                    Functional hearing is estimated to occur
                                                    lack these features.                                    hearing groups based on measured or                   between approximately 100 Hz and 48
                                                       Non-pulsed sounds can be tonal,                      estimated hearing ranges on the basis of              kHz, with best hearing between 2–48
                                                    narrowband, or broadband, brief or                      available behavioral data, audiograms                 kHz (Schusterman et al., 1972; Moore
                                                    prolonged, and may be either                            derived using auditory evoked potential               and Schusterman, 1987; Babushina et
                                                    continuous or non-continuous (NIOSH,                    techniques, anatomical modeling, and                  al., 1991; Richardson et al., 1995; Kastak
                                                    1998). Some of these non-pulsed sounds                  other data. The lower and/or upper                    and Schusterman, 1998; Kastelein et al.,
                                                    can be transient signals of short                       frequencies for some of these functional              2005a; Mulsow and Reichmuth, 2007;
                                                    duration but without the essential                      hearing groups have been modified from                Mulsow et al., 2011a, b).
                                                    properties of pulses (e.g., rapid rise                  those designated by Southall et al.
                                                                                                            (2007). The functional groups and the                    The pinniped functional hearing
                                                    time). Examples of non-pulsed sounds                                                                          group was modified from Southall et al.
                                                    include those produced by vessels,                      associated frequencies are indicated
                                                                                                            below (note that these frequency ranges               (2007) on the basis of data indicating
                                                    aircraft, machinery operations such as
                                                                                                            do not necessarily correspond to the                  that phocid species have consistently
                                                    drilling or dredging, vibratory pile
                                                                                                            range of best hearing, which varies by                demonstrated an extended frequency
                                                    driving, and active sonar systems (such
                                                                                                            species):                                             range of hearing compared to otariids,
                                                    as those used by the U.S. Navy). The
                                                                                                                                                                  especially in the higher frequency range
                                                    duration of such sounds, as received at                    • Low frequency cetaceans (13
                                                                                                            species of mysticetes): Functional                    (Hemilä et al., 2006; Kastelein et al.,
                                                    a distance, can be greatly extended in a
                                                                                                            hearing is estimated to occur between                 2009; Reichmuth et al., 2013).
                                                    highly reverberant environment.
                                                       Impact hammers operate by                            approximately 7 Hz and 25 kHz (up to                     As mentioned previously in this
                                                    repeatedly dropping a heavy piston onto                 30 kHz in some species), with best                    document, ten marine mammal species
                                                    a pile to drive the pile into the substrate.            hearing estimated to be from 100 Hz to                (eight cetaceans and two pinnipeds)
                                                    Sound generated by impact hammers is                    8 kHz (Watkins, 1986; Ketten, 1998;                   may occur in the project area. Of the six
                                                    characterized by rapid rise times and                   Houser et al., 2001; Au et al., 2006;                 species likely to occur in the proposed
                                                    high peak levels, a potentially injurious               Lucifredi and Stein, 2007; Ketten et al.,             project area for which take is requested,
                                                    combination (Hastings and Popper,                       2007; Parks et al., 2007a; Ketten and                 one is classified as a low-frequency
                                                    2005). Vibratory hammers install piles                  Mountain, 2009; Tubelli et al., 2012);                cetacean (i.e. humpback whale), one is
                                                    by vibrating them and allowing the                         • Mid-frequency cetaceans (32                      classified as a mid-frequency cetacean
                                                    weight of the hammer to push them into                  species of dolphins, six species of larger            (i.e., killer whale), and two are classified
                                                    the sediment. Vibratory hammers                         toothed whales, and 19 species of                     as a high-frequency cetaceans (i.e.,
                                                    produce significantly less sound than                   beaked and bottlenose whales):                        harbor porpoise and Dall’s porpoise)
                                                    impact hammers. Peak SPLs may be 180                    Functional hearing is estimated to occur              (Southall et al., 2007). Additionally,
                                                    dB or greater, but are generally 10 to 20               between approximately 150 Hz and 160                  harbor seals are classified as members of
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    dB lower than SPLs generated during                     kHz with best hearing from 10 to less                 the phocid pinnipeds in water
                                                    impact pile driving of the same-sized                   than 100 kHz (Johnson, 1967; White,                   functional hearing group while Stellar
                                                    pile (Oestman et al., 2009). Rise time is               1977; Richardson et al., 1995;                        sea lions are grouped under the Otariid
                                                    slower, reducing the probability and                    Szymanski et al., 1999; Kastelein et al.,             pinnipeds in water functional hearing
                                                    severity of injury, and sound energy is                 2003; Finneran et al., 2005a, 2009;                   group. A species’ functional hearing
                                                    distributed over a greater amount of                    Nachtigall et al., 2005, 2008; Yuen et al.,           group is a consideration when we
                                                    time (Nedwell and Edwards, 2002;                        2005; Popov et al., 2007; Au and                      analyze the effects of exposure to sound
                                                    Carlson et al., 2005).                                  Hastings, 2008; Houser et al., 2008;                  on marine mammals.


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                              26639

                                                    Acoustic Impacts                                        physiological effects) only briefly as we             effect of extreme behavioral reactions
                                                       Please refer to the information given                do not expect that there is a reasonable              (e.g., change in dive profile as a result
                                                    previously (Description of Sound                        likelihood that the MOS’s activities may              of an avoidance reaction) caused by
                                                    Sources) regarding sound,                               result in such effects (see below for                 exposure to sound include neurological
                                                    characteristics of sound types, and                     further discussion). Marine mammals                   effects, bubble formation, resonance
                                                    metrics used in this document.                          exposed to high-intensity sound, or to                effects, and other types of organ or
                                                    Anthropogenic sounds cover a broad                      lower-intensity sound for prolonged                   tissue damage (Cox et al., 2006; Southall
                                                    range of frequencies and sound levels                   periods, can experience hearing                       et al., 2007; Zimmer and Tyack, 2007).
                                                    and can have a range of highly variable                 threshold shift (TS), which is the loss of            The MOS’s activities do not involve the
                                                    impacts on marine life, from none or                    hearing sensitivity at certain frequency              use of devices such as explosives or
                                                    minor to potentially severe responses,                  ranges (Kastak et al., 1999; Schlundt et              mid-frequency active sonar that are
                                                    depending on received levels, duration                  al., 2000; Finneran et al., 2002, 2005b).             associated with these types of effects.
                                                                                                            TS can be permanent (PTS), in which                      When a live or dead marine mammal
                                                    of exposure, behavioral context, and
                                                                                                            case the loss of hearing sensitivity is not           swims or floats onto shore and is
                                                    various other factors. The potential
                                                                                                            fully recoverable, or temporary (TTS), in             incapable of returning to sea, the event
                                                    effects of underwater sound from active                                                                       is termed a ‘‘stranding’’ (16 U.S.C.
                                                                                                            which case the animal’s hearing
                                                    acoustic sources can potentially result                                                                       1421h(3)). Marine mammals are known
                                                                                                            threshold would recover over time
                                                    in one or more of the following:                                                                              to strand for a variety of reasons, such
                                                                                                            (Southall et al., 2007). Repeated sound
                                                    Temporary or permanent hearing                                                                                as infectious agents, biotoxicosis,
                                                                                                            exposure that leads to TTS could cause
                                                    impairment, non-auditory physical or                                                                          starvation, fishery interaction, ship
                                                                                                            PTS. In severe cases of PTS, there can
                                                    physiological effects, behavioral                                                                             strike, unusual oceanographic or
                                                                                                            be total or partial deafness, while in
                                                    disturbance, stress, and masking                                                                              weather events, sound exposure, or
                                                                                                            most cases the animal has an impaired
                                                    (Richardson et al., 1995; Gordon et al.,                ability to hear sounds in specific                    combinations of these stressors
                                                    2004; Nowacek et al., 2007; Southall et                 frequency ranges (Kryter, 1985).                      sustained concurrently or in series (e.g.,
                                                    al., 2007; Gotz et al., 2009). The degree                  When PTS occurs, there is physical                 Geraci et al., 1999). However, the cause
                                                    of effect is intrinsically related to the               damage to the sound receptors in the ear              or causes of most strandings are
                                                    signal characteristics, received level,                 (i.e., tissue damage), whereas TTS                    unknown (e.g., Best, 1982).
                                                    distance from the source, and duration                  represents primarily tissue fatigue and               Combinations of dissimilar stressors
                                                    of the sound exposure. In general,                      is reversible (Southall et al., 2007). In             may combine to kill an animal or
                                                    sudden, high level sounds can cause                     addition, other investigators have                    dramatically reduce its fitness, even
                                                    hearing loss, as can longer exposures to                suggested that TTS is within the normal               though one exposure without the other
                                                    lower level sounds. Temporary or                        bounds of physiological variability and               would not be expected to produce the
                                                    permanent loss of hearing will occur                    tolerance and does not represent                      same outcome (e.g., Sih et al., 2004). For
                                                    almost exclusively for noise within an                  physical injury (e.g., Ward, 1997).                   further description of stranding events
                                                    animal’s hearing range. We first describe               Therefore, NMFS does not consider TTS                 see, e.g., Southall et al., 2006; Jepson et
                                                    specific manifestations of acoustic                     to constitute auditory injury.                        al., 2013; Wright et al., 2013.
                                                    effects before providing discussion                        Relationships between TTS and PTS                     1. Temporary threshold shift—TTS is
                                                    specific to the MOS’s construction                      thresholds have not been studied in                   the mildest form of hearing impairment
                                                    activities.                                             marine mammals—PTS data exists only                   that can occur during exposure to sound
                                                       Richardson et al. (1995) described                   for a single harbor seal (Kastak et al.,              (Kryter, 1985). While experiencing TTS,
                                                    zones of increasing intensity of effect                 2008)—but are assumed to be similar to                the hearing threshold rises, and a sound
                                                    that might be expected to occur, in                     those in humans and other terrestrial                 must be at a higher level in order to be
                                                    relation to distance from a source and                  mammals. PTS typically occurs at                      heard. In terrestrial and marine
                                                    assuming that the signal is within an                   exposure levels at least several decibels             mammals, TTS can last from minutes or
                                                    animal’s hearing range. First is the area               above (a 40-dB threshold shift                        hours to days (in cases of strong TTS).
                                                    within which the acoustic signal would                  approximates PTS onset; e.g., Kryter et               In many cases, hearing sensitivity
                                                    be audible (potentially perceived) to the               al., 1966; Miller, 1974) that inducing                recovers rapidly after exposure to the
                                                    animal, but not strong enough to elicit                 mild TTS (a 6-dB threshold shift                      sound ends. Few data on sound levels
                                                    any overt behavioral or physiological                   approximates TTS onset; e.g., Southall                and durations necessary to elicit mild
                                                    response. The next zone corresponds                     et al. 2007). Based on data from                      TTS have been obtained for marine
                                                    with the area where the signal is audible               terrestrial mammals, a precautionary                  mammals, and none of the data
                                                    to the animal and of sufficient intensity               assumption is that the PTS thresholds                 published at the time of this writing
                                                    to elicit behavioral or physiological                   for impulse sounds (such as impact pile               concern TTS elicited by exposure to
                                                    responsiveness. Third is a zone within                  driving pulses as received close to the               multiple pulses of sound.
                                                    which, for signals of high intensity, the               source) are at least 6 dB higher than the                Marine mammal hearing plays a
                                                    received level is sufficient to potentially             TTS threshold on a peak-pressure basis                critical role in communication with
                                                    cause discomfort or tissue damage to                    and PTS cumulative sound exposure                     conspecifics, and interpretation of
                                                    auditory or other systems. Overlaying                   level thresholds are 15 to 20 dB higher               environmental cues for purposes such
                                                    these zones to a certain extent is the                  than TTS cumulative sound exposure                    as predator avoidance and prey capture.
                                                    area within which masking (i.e., when a                 level thresholds (Southall et al., 2007).             Depending on the degree (elevation of
                                                    sound interferes with or masks the                      Given the higher level of sound or                    threshold in dB), duration (i.e., recovery
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    ability of an animal to detect a signal of              longer exposure duration necessary to                 time), and frequency range of TTS, and
                                                    interest that is above the absolute                     cause PTS as compared with TTS, it is                 the context in which it is experienced,
                                                    hearing threshold) may occur; the                       considerably less likely that PTS could               TTS can have effects on marine
                                                    masking zone may be highly variable in                  occur.                                                mammals ranging from discountable to
                                                    size.                                                      Non-auditory physiological effects or              serious. For example, a marine mammal
                                                       We describe the more severe effects                  injuries that theoretically might occur in            may be able to readily compensate for
                                                    (i.e., permanent hearing impairment,                    marine mammals exposed to high level                  a brief, relatively small amount of TTS
                                                    certain non-auditory physical or                        underwater sound or as a secondary                    in a non-critical frequency range that


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                                                    26640                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    occurs during a time where ambient                      Please see Appendices B–C of Southall                 breathing, interference with or alteration
                                                    noise is lower and there are not as many                et al. (2007) for a review of studies                 of vocalization, avoidance, and flight.
                                                    competing sounds present.                               involving marine mammal behavioral                       Changes in dive behavior can vary
                                                    Alternatively, a larger amount and                      responses to sound.                                   widely, and may consist of increased or
                                                    longer duration of TTS sustained during                    Habituation can occur when an                      decreased dive times and surface
                                                    time when communication is critical for                 animal’s response to a stimulus wanes                 intervals as well as changes in the rates
                                                    successful mother/calf interactions                     with repeated exposure, usually in the                of ascent and descent during a dive (e.g.,
                                                    could have more serious impacts.                        absence of unpleasant associated events               Frankel and Clark, 2000; Costa et al.,
                                                       Currently, TTS data only exist for four              (Wartzok et al., 2003). Animals are most              2003; Ng and Leung, 2003; Nowacek et
                                                    species of cetaceans (bottlenose dolphin                likely to habituate to sounds that are                al.; 2004; Goldbogen et al., 2013a,b).
                                                    [Tursiops truncatus], beluga whale                      predictable and unvarying. It is                      Variations in dive behavior may reflect
                                                    [Delphinapterus leucas], harbor                         important to note that habituation is                 interruptions in biologically significant
                                                    porpoise, and Yangtze finless porpoise                  appropriately considered as a                         activities (e.g., foraging) or they may be
                                                    [Neophocoena asiaeorientalis]) and                      ‘‘progressive reduction in response to                of little biological significance. The
                                                    three species of pinnipeds (northern                    stimuli that are perceived as neither                 impact of an alteration to dive behavior
                                                    elephant seal, harbor seal, and                         aversive nor beneficial,’’ rather than as,            resulting from an acoustic exposure
                                                    California sea lion) exposed to a limited               more generally, moderation in response                depends on what the animal is doing at
                                                    number of sound sources (i.e., mostly                   to human disturbance (Bejder et al.,                  the time of the exposure and the type
                                                    tones and octave-band noise) in                         2009). The opposite process is                        and magnitude of the response.
                                                    laboratory settings (e.g., Finneran et al.,             sensitization, when an unpleasant                        Disruption of feeding behavior can be
                                                    2002; Nachtigall et al., 2004; Kastak et                experience leads to subsequent                        difficult to correlate with anthropogenic
                                                    al., 2005; Lucke et al., 2009; Popov et                                                                       sound exposure, so it is usually inferred
                                                                                                            responses, often in the form of
                                                    al., 2011). In general, harbor seals                                                                          by observed displacement from known
                                                                                                            avoidance, at a lower level of exposure.
                                                    (Kastak et al., 2005; Kastelein et al.,                                                                       foraging areas, the appearance of
                                                                                                            As noted, behavioral state may affect the
                                                    2012a) and harbor porpoises (Lucke et                                                                         secondary indicators (e.g., bubble nets
                                                                                                            type of response. For example, animals
                                                    al., 2009; Kastelein et al., 2012b) have                                                                      or sediment plumes), or changes in dive
                                                                                                            that are resting may show greater
                                                    a lower TTS onset than other measured                                                                         behavior. As for other types of
                                                                                                            behavioral change in response to
                                                    pinniped or cetacean species.                                                                                 behavioral response, the frequency,
                                                                                                            disturbing sound levels than animals
                                                    Additionally, the existing marine                                                                             duration, and temporal pattern of signal
                                                                                                            that are highly motivated to remain in
                                                    mammal TTS data come from a limited                                                                           presentation, as well as differences in
                                                                                                            an area for feeding (Richardson et al.,
                                                    number of individuals within these                                                                            species sensitivity, are likely
                                                                                                            1995; NRC, 2003; Wartzok et al., 2003).               contributing factors to differences in
                                                    species. There are no data available on
                                                                                                            Controlled experiments with captive                   response in any given circumstance
                                                    noise-induced hearing loss for
                                                                                                            marine mammals have showed                            (e.g., Croll et al., 2001; Nowacek et al.;
                                                    mysticetes. For summaries of data on
                                                                                                            pronounced behavioral reactions,                      2004; Madsen et al., 2006; Yazvenko et
                                                    TTS in marine mammals or for further
                                                                                                            including avoidance of loud sound                     al., 2007). A determination of whether
                                                    discussion of TTS onset thresholds,
                                                                                                            sources (Ridgway et al., 1997; Finneran               foraging disruptions incur fitness
                                                    please see Southall et al. (2007) and
                                                                                                            et al., 2003). Observed responses of wild             consequences would require
                                                    Finneran and Jenkins (2012).
                                                       2. Behavioral effects—Behavioral                     marine mammals to loud pulsed sound                   information on or estimates of the
                                                    disturbance may include a variety of                    sources (typically seismic airguns or                 energetic requirements of the affected
                                                    effects, including subtle changes in                    acoustic harassment devices) have been                individuals and the relationship
                                                    behavior (e.g., minor or brief avoidance                varied but often consist of avoidance                 between prey availability, foraging effort
                                                    of an area or changes in vocalizations),                behavior or other behavioral changes                  and success, and the life history stage of
                                                    more conspicuous changes in similar                     suggesting discomfort (Morton and                     the animal.
                                                    behavioral activities, and more                         Symonds, 2002; see also Richardson et                    Variations in respiration naturally
                                                    sustained and/or potentially severe                     al., 1995; Nowacek et al., 2007).                     vary with different behaviors and
                                                    reactions, such as displacement from or                    Available studies show wide variation              alterations to breathing rate as a
                                                    abandonment of high-quality habitat.                    in response to underwater sound;                      function of acoustic exposure can be
                                                    Behavioral responses to sound are                       therefore, it is difficult to predict                 expected to co-occur with other
                                                    highly variable and context-specific and                specifically how any given sound in a                 behavioral reactions, such as a flight
                                                    any reactions depend on numerous                        particular instance might affect marine               response or an alteration in diving.
                                                    intrinsic and extrinsic factors (e.g.,                  mammals perceiving the signal. If a                   However, respiration rates in and of
                                                    species, state of maturity, experience,                 marine mammal does react briefly to an                themselves may be representative of
                                                    current activity, reproductive state,                   underwater sound by changing its                      annoyance or an acute stress response.
                                                    auditory sensitivity, time of day), as                  behavior or moving a small distance, the              Various studies have shown that
                                                    well as the interplay between factors                   impacts of the change are unlikely to be              respiration rates may either be
                                                    (e.g., Richardson et al., 1995; Wartzok et              significant to the individual, let alone              unaffected or could increase, depending
                                                    al., 2003; Southall et al., 2007; Weilgart,             the stock or population. However, if a                on the species and signal characteristics,
                                                    2007; Archer et al., 2010). Behavioral                  sound source displaces marine                         again highlighting the importance in
                                                    reactions can vary not only among                       mammals from an important feeding or                  understanding species differences in the
                                                    individuals but also within an                          breeding area for a prolonged period,                 tolerance of underwater noise when
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    individual, depending on previous                       impacts on individuals and populations                determining the potential for impacts
                                                    experience with a sound source,                         could be significant (e.g., Lusseau and               resulting from anthropogenic sound
                                                    context, and numerous other factors                     Bejder, 2007; Weilgart, 2007; NRC,                    exposure (e.g., Kastelein et al., 2001,
                                                    (Ellison et al., 2012), and can vary                    2005). However, there are broad                       2005b, 2006; Gailey et al., 2007).
                                                    depending on characteristics associated                 categories of potential response, which                  Marine mammals vocalize for
                                                    with the sound source (e.g., whether it                 we describe in greater detail here, that              different purposes and across multiple
                                                    is moving or stationary, number of                      include alteration of dive behavior,                  modes, such as whistling, echolocation
                                                    sources, distance from the source).                     alteration of foraging behavior, effects to           click production, calling, and singing.


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                              26641

                                                    Changes in vocalization behavior in                     whether individuals are solitary or in                pressure, and gastrointestinal activity.
                                                    response to anthropogenic noise can                     groups may influence the response.                    These responses have a relatively short
                                                    occur for any of these modes and may                       Behavioral disturbance can also                    duration and may or may not have a
                                                    result from a need to compete with an                   impact marine mammals in more subtle                  significant long-term effect on an
                                                    increase in background noise or may                     ways. Increased vigilance may result in               animal’s fitness.
                                                    reflect increased vigilance or a startle                costs related to diversion of focus and                  Neuroendocrine stress responses often
                                                    response. For example, in the presence                  attention (i.e., when a response consists             involve the hypothalamus-pituitary-
                                                    of potentially masking signals,                         of increased vigilance, it may come at                adrenal system. Virtually all
                                                    humpback whales and killer whales                       the cost of decreased attention to other              neuroendocrine functions that are
                                                    have been observed to increase the                      critical behaviors such as foraging or                affected by stress—including immune
                                                    length of their songs (Miller et al., 2000;             resting). These effects have generally not            competence, reproduction, metabolism,
                                                    Fristrup et al., 2003; Foote et al., 2004),             been demonstrated for marine                          and behavior—are regulated by pituitary
                                                    while right whales have been observed                   mammals, but studies involving fish                   hormones. Stress-induced changes in
                                                    to shift the frequency content of their                 and terrestrial animals have shown that               the secretion of pituitary hormones have
                                                    calls upward while reducing the rate of                 increased vigilance may substantially                 been implicated in failed reproduction,
                                                    calling in areas of increased                           reduce feeding rates (e.g., Beauchamp                 altered metabolism, reduced immune
                                                    anthropogenic noise (Parks et al.,                      and Livoreil, 1997; Fritz et al., 2002;               competence, and behavioral disturbance
                                                    2007b). In some cases, animals may                      Purser and Radford, 2011). In addition,               (e.g., Moberg, 1987; Blecha, 2000).
                                                    cease sound production during                           chronic disturbance can cause                         Increases in the circulation of
                                                    production of aversive signals (Bowles                  population declines through reduction                 glucocorticoids are also equated with
                                                    et al., 1994).                                          of fitness (e.g., decline in body                     stress (Romano et al., 2004).
                                                       Avoidance is the displacement of an                  condition) and subsequent reduction in                   The primary distinction between
                                                    individual from an area or migration                    reproductive success, survival, or both               stress (which is adaptive and does not
                                                    path as a result of the presence of a                   (e.g., Harrington and Veitch, 1992; Daan              normally place an animal at risk) and
                                                    sound or other stressors, and is one of                 et al., 1996; Bradshaw et al., 1998).                 ‘‘distress’’ is the cost of the response.
                                                    the most obvious manifestations of                      However, Ridgway et al. (2006) reported
                                                                                                                                                                  During a stress response, an animal uses
                                                    disturbance in marine mammals                           that increased vigilance in bottlenose
                                                                                                                                                                  glycogen stores that can be quickly
                                                    (Richardson et al., 1995). For example,                 dolphins exposed to sound over a five-
                                                                                                                                                                  replenished once the stress is alleviated.
                                                                                                            day period did not cause any sleep
                                                    gray whales are known to change                                                                               In such circumstances, the cost of the
                                                                                                            deprivation or stress effects.
                                                    direction—deflecting from customary                                                                           stress response would not pose serious
                                                                                                               Many animals perform vital functions,
                                                    migratory paths—in order to avoid noise                 such as feeding, resting, traveling, and              fitness consequences. However, when
                                                    from seismic surveys (Malme et al.,                     socializing, on a diel cycle (24-hour                 an animal does not have sufficient
                                                    1984). Avoidance may be short-term,                     cycle). Disruption of such functions                  energy reserves to satisfy the energetic
                                                    with animals returning to the area once                 resulting from reactions to stressors                 costs of a stress response, energy
                                                    the noise has ceased (e.g., Bowles et al.,              such as sound exposure are more likely                resources must be diverted from other
                                                    1994; Goold, 1996; Stone et al., 2000;                  to be significant if they last more than              functions. This state of distress will last
                                                    Morton and Symonds, 2002; Gailey et                     one diel cycle or recur on subsequent                 until the animal replenishes its
                                                    al., 2007). Longer-term displacement is                 days (Southall et al., 2007).                         energetic reserves sufficient to restore
                                                    possible, however, which may lead to                    Consequently, a behavioral response                   normal function.
                                                    changes in abundance or distribution                    lasting less than one day and not                        Relationships between these
                                                    patterns of the affected species in the                 recurring on subsequent days is not                   physiological mechanisms, animal
                                                    affected region if habituation to the                   considered particularly severe unless it              behavior, and the costs of stress
                                                    presence of the sound does not occur                    could directly affect reproduction or                 responses are well-studied through
                                                    (e.g., Blackwell et al., 2004; Bejder et al.,           survival (Southall et al., 2007). Note that           controlled experiments and for both
                                                    2006; Teilmann et al., 2006).                           there is a difference between multi-day               laboratory and free-ranging animals
                                                       A flight response is a dramatic change               substantive behavioral reactions and                  (e.g., Holberton et al., 1996; Hood et al.,
                                                    in normal movement to a directed and                    multi-day anthropogenic activities. For               1998; Jessop et al., 2003; Krausman et
                                                    rapid movement away from the                            example, just because an activity lasts               al., 2004; Lankford et al., 2005). Stress
                                                    perceived location of a sound source.                   for multiple days does not necessarily                responses due to exposure to
                                                    The flight response differs from other                  mean that individual animals are either               anthropogenic sounds or other stressors
                                                    avoidance responses in the intensity of                 exposed to activity-related stressors for             and their effects on marine mammals
                                                    the response (e.g., directed movement,                  multiple days or, further, exposed in a               have also been reviewed (Fair and
                                                    rate of travel). Relatively little                      manner resulting in sustained multi-day               Becker, 2000; Romano et al., 2002b)
                                                    information on flight responses of                      substantive behavioral responses.                     and, more rarely, studied in wild
                                                    marine mammals to anthropogenic                            3. Stress responses—An animal’s                    populations (e.g., Romano et al., 2002a).
                                                    signals exist, although observations of                 perception of a threat may be sufficient              For example, Rolland et al. (2012) found
                                                    flight responses to the presence of                     to trigger stress responses consisting of             that noise reduction from reduced ship
                                                    predators have occurred (Connor and                     some combination of behavioral                        traffic in the Bay of Fundy was
                                                    Heithaus, 1996). The result of a flight                 responses, autonomic nervous system                   associated with decreased stress in
                                                    response could range from brief,                        responses, neuroendocrine responses, or               North Atlantic right whales. These and
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    temporary exertion and displacement                     immune responses (e.g., Seyle, 1950;                  other studies lead to a reasonable
                                                    from the area where the signal provokes                 Moberg, 2000). In many cases, an                      expectation that some marine mammals
                                                    flight to, in extreme cases, marine                     animal’s first and sometimes most                     will experience physiological stress
                                                    mammal strandings (Evans and                            economical (in terms of energetic costs)              responses upon exposure to acoustic
                                                    England, 2001). However, it should be                   response is behavioral avoidance of the               stressors and that it is possible that
                                                    noted that response to a perceived                      potential stressor. Autonomic nervous                 some of these would be classified as
                                                    predator does not necessarily invoke                    system responses to stress typically                  ‘‘distress.’’ In addition, any animal
                                                    flight (Ford and Reeves, 2008), and                     involve changes in heart rate, blood                  experiencing TTS would likely also


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                                                    26642                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    experience stress responses (NRC,                       2007b; Di Iorio and Clark, 2009; Holt et              (e.g., rock) which may reflect the
                                                    2003).                                                  al., 2009). Masking can be reduced in                 acoustic wave. Soft porous substrates
                                                       4. Auditory masking—Sound can                        situations where the signal and noise                 would also likely require less time to
                                                    disrupt behavior through masking, or                    come from different directions                        drive the pile, and possibly less forceful
                                                    interfering with, an animal’s ability to                (Richardson et al., 1995), through                    equipment, which would ultimately
                                                    detect, recognize, or discriminate                      amplitude modulation of the signal, or                decrease the intensity of the acoustic
                                                    between acoustic signals of interest (e.g.,             through other compensatory behaviors                  source.
                                                    those used for intraspecific                            (Houser and Moore, 2014). Masking can                    In the absence of mitigation, impacts
                                                    communication and social interactions,                  be tested directly in captive species                 to marine species could be expected to
                                                    prey detection, predator avoidance,                     (e.g., Erbe, 2008), but in wild                       include physiological and behavioral
                                                    navigation) (Richardson et al., 1995).                  populations it must be either modeled                 responses to the acoustic signature
                                                    Masking occurs when the receipt of a                    or inferred from evidence of masking                  (Viada et al., 2008). Potential effects
                                                    sound is interfered with by another                     compensation. There are few studies                   from impulsive sound sources like pile
                                                    coincident sound at similar frequencies                 addressing real-world masking sounds                  driving can range in severity from
                                                    and at similar or higher intensity, and                 likely to be experienced by marine                    effects such as behavioral disturbance to
                                                    may occur whether the sound is natural                  mammals in the wild (e.g., Branstetter et             temporary or permanent hearing
                                                    (e.g., snapping shrimp, wind, waves,                    al., 2013).                                           impairment (Yelverton et al., 1973).
                                                    precipitation) or anthropogenic (e.g.,                     Masking affects both senders and                      Hearing Impairment and Other
                                                    shipping, sonar, seismic exploration) in                receivers of acoustic signals and can                 Physical Effects—Marine mammals
                                                    origin. The ability of a noise source to                potentially have long-term chronic                    exposed to high intensity sound
                                                    mask biologically important sounds                      effects on marine mammals at the                      repeatedly or for prolonged periods can
                                                    depends on the characteristics of both                  population level as well as at the                    experience hearing threshold shifts. PTS
                                                    the noise source and the signal of                      individual level. Low-frequency                       constitutes injury, but TTS does not
                                                    interest (e.g., signal-to-noise ratio,                  ambient sound levels have increased by                (Southall et al., 2007). Based on the best
                                                    temporal variability, direction), in                    as much as 20 dB (more than three times               scientific information available, the
                                                    relation to each other and to an animal’s               in terms of SPL) in the world’s ocean                 SPLs for the construction activities in
                                                    hearing abilities (e.g., sensitivity,                   from pre-industrial periods, with most                this project are far below the thresholds
                                                    frequency range, critical ratios,                       of the increase from distant commercial               that could cause TTS or the onset of
                                                    frequency discrimination, directional                   shipping (Hildebrand, 2009). All                      PTS: 180 dB re 1 mPa rms for
                                                    discrimination, age or TTS hearing loss),               anthropogenic sound sources, but                      odontocetes and 190 dB re 1 mPa rms for
                                                    and existing ambient noise and                          especially chronic and lower-frequency                pinnipeds (Table 4).
                                                    propagation conditions.                                 signals (e.g., from vessel traffic),                     Non-auditory Physiological Effects—
                                                       Under certain circumstances, marine                  contribute to elevated ambient sound                  Non-auditory physiological effects or
                                                    mammals experiencing significant                        levels, thus intensifying masking.                    injuries that theoretically might occur in
                                                    masking could also be impaired from                        Potential Effects of Pile Driving                  marine mammals exposed to strong
                                                    maximizing their performance fitness in                 Sound—The effects of sounds from pile                 underwater sound include stress,
                                                    survival and reproduction. Therefore,                   driving might include one or more of                  neurological effects, bubble formation,
                                                    when the coincident (masking) sound is                  the following: Temporary or permanent                 resonance effects, and other types of
                                                    man-made, it may be considered                          hearing impairment, non-auditory                      organ or tissue damage (Cox et al., 2006;
                                                    harassment when disrupting or altering                  physical or physiological effects,                    Southall et al., 2007). Studies examining
                                                    critical behaviors. It is important to                  behavioral disturbance, and masking                   such effects are limited. In general, little
                                                    distinguish TTS and PTS, which persist                  (Richardson et al., 1995; Gordon et al.,              is known about the potential for pile
                                                    after the sound exposure, from masking,                 2003; Nowacek et al., 2007; Southall et               driving to cause auditory impairment or
                                                    which occurs during the sound                           al., 2007). The effects of pile driving on            other physical effects in marine
                                                    exposure. Because masking (without                      marine mammals are dependent on                       mammals. Available data suggest that
                                                    resulting in TS) is not associated with                 several factors, including the type and               such effects, if they occur at all, would
                                                    abnormal physiological function, it is                  depth of the animal; the pile size and                presumably be limited to short distances
                                                    not considered a physiological effect,                  type, and the intensity and duration of               from the sound source and to activities
                                                    but rather a potential behavioral effect.               the pile driving sound; the depth of the              that extend over a prolonged period.
                                                       The frequency range of the potentially               water column; the substrate; the                      The available data do not allow
                                                    masking sound is important in                           standoff distance between the pile and                identification of a specific exposure
                                                    determining any potential behavioral                    the animal; and the sound propagation                 level above which non-auditory effects
                                                    impacts. For example, low-frequency                     properties of the environment. Impacts                can be expected (Southall et al., 2007)
                                                    signals may have less effect on high-                   to marine mammals from pile driving                   or any meaningful quantitative
                                                    frequency echolocation sounds                           activities are expected to result                     predictions of the numbers (if any) of
                                                    produced by odontocetes but are more                    primarily from acoustic pathways. As                  marine mammals that might be affected
                                                    likely to affect detection of mysticete                 such, the degree of effect is intrinsically           in those ways. Marine mammals that
                                                    communication calls and other                           related to the frequency, received level,             show behavioral avoidance of pile
                                                    potentially important natural sounds                    and duration of the sound exposure,                   driving, including some odontocetes
                                                    such as those produced by surf and                      which are in turn influenced by the                   and some pinnipeds, are especially
                                                    some prey species. The masking of                       distance between the animal and the
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                                                                                  unlikely to incur auditory impairment
                                                    communication signals by                                source. The further away from the                     or non-auditory physical effects.
                                                    anthropogenic noise may be considered                   source, the less intense the exposure
                                                    as a reduction in the communication                     should be. The substrate and depth of                 Disturbance Reactions
                                                    space of animals (e.g., Clark et al., 2009)             the habitat affect the sound propagation                Responses to continuous sound, such
                                                    and may result in energetic or other                    properties of the environment. In                     as vibratory pile installation, have not
                                                    costs as animals change their                           addition, substrates that are soft (e.g.,             been documented as well as responses
                                                    vocalization behavior (e.g., Miller et al.,             sand) would absorb or attenuate the                   to pulsed sounds. With both types of
                                                    2000; Foote et al., 2004; Parks et al.,                 sound more readily than hard substrates               pile driving, it is likely that the onset of


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                            26643

                                                    pile driving could result in temporary,                 be within the audible range of marine                 thresholds for behavioral harassment are
                                                    short term changes in an animal’s                       mammals present in the project area.                  not believed to result in increased
                                                    typical behavior and/or avoidance of the                Impact pile driving activity is relatively            behavioral disturbance, in either nature
                                                    affected area. These behavioral changes                 short-term, with rapid pulses occurring               or intensity of disturbance reaction.
                                                    may include (Richardson et al., 1995):                  for approximately fifteen minutes per                 Therefore, we do not believe that
                                                    changing durations of surfacing and                     pile. The probability for impact pile                 authorization of incidental take
                                                    dives, number of blows per surfacing, or                driving resulting from this proposed                  resulting from airborne sound for
                                                    moving direction and/or speed;                          action masking acoustic signals                       pinnipeds is warranted, and airborne
                                                    reduced/increased vocal activities;                     important to the behavior and survival                sound is not discussed further here.
                                                    changing/cessation of certain behavioral                of marine mammal species is low.
                                                    activities (such as socializing or                      Vibratory pile driving is also relatively             Vessel Interaction
                                                    feeding); visible startle response or                   short-term, with rapid oscillations                      Besides being susceptible to vessel
                                                    aggressive behavior (such as tail/fluke                 occurring for approximately one and a                 strikes, cetacean and pinniped
                                                    slapping or jaw clapping); avoidance of                 half hours per pile. It is possible that              responses to vessels may result in
                                                    areas where sound sources are located;                  vibratory pile driving resulting from this            behavioral changes, including greater
                                                    and/or flight responses (e.g., pinnipeds                proposed action may mask acoustic                     variability in the dive, surfacing, and
                                                    flushing into water from haul-outs or                   signals important to the behavior and                 respiration patterns; changes in
                                                    rookeries). Pinnipeds may increase their                survival of marine mammal species, but                vocalizations; and changes in swimming
                                                    haul-out time, possibly to avoid in-                    the short-term duration and limited                   speed or direction (NRC 2003). There
                                                    water disturbance (Thorson and Reyff,                   affected area would result in                         will be a temporary and localized
                                                    2006).                                                  insignificant impacts from masking.                   increase in vessel traffic during
                                                       The biological significance of many of               Any masking event that could possibly                 construction.
                                                    these behavioral disturbances is difficult              rise to Level B harassment under the
                                                    to predict, especially if the detected                  MMPA would occur concurrently                         Anticipated Effects on Marine Mammal
                                                    disturbances appear minor. However,                     within the zones of behavioral                        Habitat
                                                    the consequences of behavioral                          harassment already estimated for                         The proposed activities at SOT would
                                                    modification could be expected to be                    vibratory and impact pile driving, and                not result in permanent negative
                                                    biologically significant if the change                  which have already been taken into                    impacts to habitats used directly by
                                                    affects growth, survival, or                            account in the exposure analysis.                     marine mammals, but may have
                                                    reproduction. Significant behavioral                       Acoustic Effects, Airborne—Pinnipeds               potential short-term impacts to food
                                                    modifications that could potentially                    that occur near the project site could be             sources such as forage fish and may
                                                    lead to effects on growth, survival, or                 exposed to airborne sounds associated                 affect acoustic habitat (see masking
                                                    reproduction include:                                   with pile driving that have the potential             discussion above). There are no known
                                                       • Drastic changes in diving/surfacing                to cause behavioral harassment,                       foraging hotspots or other ocean bottom
                                                    patterns (such as those thought to cause                depending on their distance from pile                 structure of significant biological
                                                    beaked whale stranding due to exposure                  driving activities. Cetaceans are not                 importance to marine mammals present
                                                    to military mid-frequency tactical                      expected to be exposed to airborne                    in the marine waters of the project area.
                                                    sonar);                                                 sounds that would result in harassment                Therefore, the main impact issue
                                                       • Longer-term habitat abandonment                    as defined under the MMPA.                            associated with the proposed activity
                                                    due to loss of desirable acoustic                          Airborne noise will primarily be an
                                                                                                                                                                  would be temporarily elevated sound
                                                    environment; and                                        issue for pinnipeds that are swimming
                                                                                                                                                                  levels and the associated direct effects
                                                       • Longer-term cessation of feeding or                or hauled out near the project site
                                                                                                            within the range of noise levels elevated             on marine mammals, as discussed
                                                    social interaction.
                                                       The onset of behavioral disturbance                  above the acoustic criteria in Table 4                previously in this document, as well as
                                                    from anthropogenic sound depends on                     below. We recognize that pinnipeds in                 potential short-term effects to water and
                                                    both external factors (characteristics of               the water could be exposed to airborne                sediment quality.
                                                    sound sources and their paths) and the                  sound that may result in behavioral                      The primary potential acoustic
                                                    specific characteristics of the receiving               harassment when looking with heads                    impacts to marine mammal habitat are
                                                    animals (hearing, motivation,                           above water. Most likely, airborne                    associated with elevated sound levels
                                                    experience, demography) and is difficult                sound would cause behavioral                          produced by vibratory and impact pile
                                                    to predict (Southall et al., 2007).                     responses similar to those discussed                  driving and removal in the area.
                                                                                                            above in relation to underwater sound.                However, other potential impacts to the
                                                    Auditory Masking                                                                                              surrounding habitat from physical
                                                                                                            For instance, anthropogenic sound
                                                       Natural and artificial sounds can                    could cause hauled-out pinnipeds to                   disturbance are also possible.
                                                    disrupt behavior by masking. The                        exhibit changes in their normal                          The proposed dredging activities were
                                                    frequency range of the potentially                      behavior, such as reduction in                        designed to remove impacted sediments
                                                    masking sound is important in                           vocalizations, or cause them to                       (i.e., sediments with metals and/or
                                                    determining any potential behavioral                    temporarily abandon the area and move                 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)
                                                    impacts. Because sound generated from                   further from the source. However, these               concentrations exceeding sediment
                                                    in-water pile driving is mostly                         animals would previously have been                    cleanup objectives. The volume of
                                                    concentrated at low frequency ranges, it                ‘taken’ as a result of exposure to                    potentially contaminated material
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    may have less effect on high frequency                  underwater sound above the behavioral                 subject to dredging and treatment or
                                                    echolocation sounds made by porpoises.                  harassment thresholds, which are in all               disposal in an approved hazardous
                                                    The most intense underwater sounds in                   cases larger than those associated with               waste facility is estimated to be 17,300
                                                    the proposed action are those produced                  airborne sound. Thus, the behavioral                  cubic yards. The dredging activities are
                                                    by impact pile driving. Given that the                  harassment of these animals is already                predicted to have a positive impact on
                                                    energy distribution of pile driving                     accounted for in these estimates of                   the habitat, and any negative short term
                                                    covers a broad frequency spectrum,                      potential take. Multiple incidents of                 impacts (discussed below) are
                                                    sound from these sources would likely                   exposure to sound above NMFS’                         inconsequential in comparison to the


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                                                    26644                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    overall benefit the environment will                    Scholik and Yan, 2001, 2002; Popper                   increased turbidity levels is expected to
                                                    receive from these actions.                             and Hastings, 2009). Sound pulses at                  be discountable to marine mammals.
                                                       Sediments within the proposed                        received levels of 160 dB may cause                   Furthermore, pile driving and removal
                                                    dredge footprint at the Skagway Harbor                  subtle changes in fish behavior. SPLs of              at the project site will not obstruct
                                                    have been recently sampled and tested                   180 dB may cause noticeable changes in                movements or migration of marine
                                                    (Anchor QEA 2014). Sediment                             behavior (Pearson et al., 1992; Skalski et            mammals.
                                                    chemistry data show levels of current                   al., 1992). SPLs of sufficient strength                  Noise measurements of dredging
                                                    sediment contamination that may cause                   have been known to cause injury to fish               activities are rare in the literature, but
                                                    low, chronic, long term ecological                      and fish mortality.                                   dredging is considered to be a low-
                                                    effects to benthic habitats, but would                     The most likely impact to fish from                impact activity for marine mammals,
                                                    not likely cause acute, toxic effects                   pile driving activities at the project area           producing non-pulsed sound and being
                                                    within the water column. The dredge                     would be temporary behavioral                         substantially quieter in terms of acoustic
                                                    prism of potentially contaminated                       avoidance of the area. The duration of                energy output than sources such as
                                                    sediment occupies approximately                         fish avoidance of this area after pile                seismic airguns and impact pile driving.
                                                    41,000 square feet (0.004 square                        driving stops is unknown, but a rapid                 Noise produced by dredging operations
                                                    kilometers), adjacent to the Ore Dock.                  return to normal recruitment,                         has been compared to that produced by
                                                    Physical resuspension of sediments                      distribution and behavior is anticipated.             a commercial vessel travelling at modest
                                                    would occur during dredging and would                   In general, impacts to marine mammal                  speed (Robinson et al., 2011). Further
                                                    produce localized impacts to water                      prey species are expected to be minor                 discussion of dredging sound
                                                    quality in the form of elevated turbidity               and temporary due to the short                        production may be found in the
                                                    plumes that would last from a few                       timeframe for the project.                            literature (e.g., Richardson et al., 1995,
                                                    minutes to several hours. Associated                       Construction activities, in the form of            Nedwell et al., 2008, Parvin et al., 2008,
                                                    contaminants are expected to be tightly                 increased turbidity, have the potential               Ainslie et al., 2009). Generally, the
                                                    bound to the sediment matrix. Because                   to adversely affect forage fish and                   effects of dredging on marine mammals
                                                    of the relatively small dredge prism,                   juvenile salmonid outmigratory routes                 are not expected to rise to the level of
                                                    these plumes would be limited to the                    in the project area. Both herring and                 a take. However, one study found peak
                                                    immediate vicinity of the Ore Dock and                  salmon form a significant prey base for               sound pressure levels from clamshell
                                                    this portion of Skagway Harbor. There is                Steller sea lions, and herring is a                   dredging in Cook Inlet measured 124
                                                    the potential for pinnipeds to be                       primary prey of humpback whales.                      decibels (re 1 mPa) at the 150 meter
                                                    exposed to increased turbidity during                   Increased turbidity is expected to occur              isopleth with the peak sound levels
                                                    dredge operations within Skagway                        in the immediate vicinity (on the order               associated with the dredger striking the
                                                    Harbor. However, exposure to                            of 10 feet or less) of construction                   hard ocean floor (Dickerson et al. 2001).
                                                    resuspended contaminants is expected                    activities. However, suspended                        Therefore, to further reduce potential
                                                    to be low since sediments would not be                  sediments and particulates are expected               acoustic impacts to endangered
                                                    ingested and contaminants would be                      to dissipate quickly within a single tidal            humpback whales and Steller sea lions,
                                                    tightly bound to them. Best management                  cycle. Given the limited area affected                there will be a 200 meter dredging
                                                    practices will be instituted to limit                   and high tidal dilution rates any effects             shutdown zone for ESA-listed species.
                                                    exposure pathways in areas where                        on forage fish and salmon are expected
                                                                                                            to be minor or negligible. In addition,               Proposed Mitigation
                                                    dredge materials are being handled.
                                                    Given the relatively small dredge                       best management practices will be in                     In order to issue an IHA under section
                                                    footprint, which limits the size of the                 effect, which will limit the extent of                101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA, NMFS must
                                                    dredge plume; the turbidity will be                     turbidity to the immediate project area.              set forth the permissible methods of
                                                    limited by efforts taken to limit/prevent               Finally, exposure to these contaminants               taking pursuant to such activity, ‘‘and
                                                    exposure through BMPs; the plume will                   from dredging is not expected to be                   other means of effecting the least
                                                    be temporary and will not have a direct                 different from the current exposure; fish             practicable impact on such species or
                                                    exposure mechanism to marine                            and marine mammals in the Taiya Inlet/                stock and its habitat, paying particular
                                                    mammals; and activities will occur                      Lynn Canal region are routinely exposed               attention to rookeries, mating grounds,
                                                    during the winter period when fewer                     to substantial levels of suspended                    and areas of similar significance, and on
                                                    pinnipeds have been observed in the                     sediment from glacial sources.                        the availability of such species or stock
                                                    area, effects on marine mammals are                                                                           for taking’’ for certain subsistence uses.
                                                                                                            Construction Effects on Potential                        Measurements from similar pile
                                                    considered negligible.                                  Foraging Habitat                                      driving events were coupled with
                                                    Construction Effects on Potential Prey                    Pile installation may temporarily                   practical spreading loss to estimate
                                                       Construction activities would produce                increase turbidity resulting from                     zones of influence (ZOI; see Estimated
                                                    continuous (i.e., vibratory pile driving)               suspended sediments. Any increases                    Take by Incidental Harassment); these
                                                    sounds and pulsed (i.e. impact driving)                 would be temporary, localized, and                    values were used to develop mitigation
                                                    sounds. Fish react to sounds that are                   minimal. MOS must comply with state                   measures for pile driving and removal
                                                    especially strong and/or intermittent                   water quality standards during these                  activities at SOT. The ZOIs effectively
                                                    low-frequency sounds. Short duration,                   operations by limiting the extent of                  represent the mitigation zone that
                                                    sharp sounds can cause overt or subtle                  turbidity to the immediate project area.              would be established around each pile
                                                    changes in fish behavior and local                      In general, turbidity associated with pile            to provide estimates of the areas within
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    distribution. Hastings and Popper (2005)                installation is localized to about a 25-              which Level B, and potential Level A,
                                                    identified several studies that suggest                 foot radius around the pile (Everitt et al.           harassment might occur. In addition to
                                                    fish may relocate to avoid certain areas                1980). Cetaceans are not expected to be               the specific measures described later in
                                                    of sound energy. Additional studies                     close enough to the project pile driving              this section, MOS would conduct
                                                    have documented effects of pile driving                 areas to experience effects of turbidity,             briefings between construction
                                                    on fish, although several are based on                  and any pinnipeds will be transiting the              supervisors and crews, marine mammal
                                                    studies in support of large, multiyear                  area and could avoid localized areas of               monitoring team, and other staff prior to
                                                    bridge construction projects (e.g.,                     turbidity. Therefore, the impact from                 the start of all pile driving activity, and


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                               26645

                                                    when new personnel join the work, in                    clamshell dredging will not be                        completed without cessation, unless the
                                                    order to explain responsibilities,                      considered further in this document.                  animal approaches or enters the
                                                    communication procedures, marine                           Disturbance Zone—Disturbance zones                 shutdown zone, at which point all pile
                                                    mammal monitoring protocol, and                         are the areas in which SPLs equal or                  driving activities would be halted.
                                                    operational procedures.                                 exceed 160 and 120 dB rms (for impulse                Monitoring will take place from 15
                                                      For the proposed project, MOS                         and continuous sound, respectively).                  minutes prior to initiation through 30
                                                    worked with NMFS and proposed the                       Disturbance zones provide utility for                 minutes post-completion of pile driving
                                                    following mitigation measures to                        monitoring conducted for mitigation                   activities. Pile driving activities include
                                                    minimize the potential impacts to                       purposes (i.e., shutdown zone                         the time to install or remove a single
                                                    marine mammals in the project vicinity.                 monitoring) by establishing monitoring                pile or series of piles, as long as the time
                                                    The primary purposes of these                           protocols for areas adjacent to the                   elapsed between uses of the pile driving
                                                    mitigation measures are to minimize                     shutdown zones. Monitoring of                         equipment is no more than thirty
                                                    sound levels from the activities, and to                disturbance zones enables observers to                minutes. Please see Appendix A of the
                                                    monitor marine mammals within                           be aware of and communicate the                       application for details on the marine
                                                    designated zones of influence                           presence of marine mammals in the                     mammal monitoring plan developed by
                                                    corresponding to NMFS’ current Level                    project area but outside the shutdown                 the MOS with NMFS’ cooperation.
                                                    A and B harassment thresholds which                     zone and thus prepare for potential                      The following additional measures
                                                    are depicted in Table 4 found later in                  shutdowns of activity. However, the                   apply to visual monitoring:
                                                    the Estimated Take by Incidental                        primary purpose of disturbance zone                      (1) Monitoring will be conducted by
                                                    Harassment section.                                     monitoring is for documenting incidents               qualified observers, who will be placed
                                                                                                            of Level B harassment; disturbance zone               at the best vantage point(s) practicable
                                                    Monitoring and Shutdown for Pile                        monitoring is discussed in greater detail             to monitor for marine mammals and
                                                    Driving                                                 later (see Proposed Monitoring and                    implement shutdown/delay procedures
                                                      The following measures, developed                     Reporting). Nominal radial distances for              when applicable by calling for the
                                                    by MOS and NMFS, would apply to the                     disturbance zones are shown in Table 5.               shutdown to the hammer operator.
                                                    MOS’s mitigation through shutdown                       Given the size of the disturbance zone                Qualified observers are trained
                                                    and disturbance zones:                                  for vibratory pile driving, it is                     biologists, with the following minimum
                                                                                                            impossible to guarantee that all animals              qualifications:
                                                      Shutdown Zone—For all pile driving
                                                                                                            would be observed or to make                             (a) Visual acuity in both eyes
                                                    activities, the MOS will establish a
                                                                                                            comprehensive observations of fine-                   (correction is permissible) sufficient for
                                                    shutdown zone intended to contain the
                                                                                                            scale behavioral reactions to sound, and              discernment of moving targets at the
                                                    area in which SPLs equal or exceed the
                                                                                                            only a portion of the zone (e.g., what
                                                    180 dB rms acoustic injury criteria for                                                                       water’s surface with ability to estimate
                                                                                                            may be reasonably observed by visual
                                                    cetaceans, and 190 dB rms for                                                                                 target size and distance; use of
                                                                                                            observers stationed within the SOT)
                                                    pinnipeds. The purpose of a shutdown                                                                          binoculars may be necessary to correctly
                                                                                                            would be observed.
                                                    zone is to define an area within which                     In order to document observed                      identify the target;
                                                    shutdown of activity would occur upon                   incidents of harassment, monitors                        (b) Advanced education in biological
                                                    sighting of a marine mammal (or in                      record all marine mammal observations,                science or related field (undergraduate
                                                    anticipation of an animal entering the                  regardless of location. The observer’s                degree or higher required);
                                                    defined area), thus preventing injury of                location, as well as the location of the                 (c) Experience and ability to conduct
                                                    marine mammals (as described                            pile being driven or removed, is known                field observations and collect data
                                                    previously under Potential Effects of the               from a GPS. The location of the animal                according to assigned protocols (this
                                                    Specified Activity on Marine Mammals).                  is estimated as a distance from the                   may include academic experience);
                                                    Serious injury or death are unlikely                    observer, which is then compared to the                  (d) Experience or training in the field
                                                    outcomes even in the absence of                         location from the pile. It may then be                identification of marine mammals,
                                                    mitigation measures. Modeled radial                     estimated whether the animal was                      including the identification of
                                                    distances for shutdown zones are shown                  exposed to sound levels constituting                  behaviors;
                                                    in Table 5 below. A minimum                             incidental harassment on the basis of                    (e) Sufficient training, orientation, or
                                                    shutdown zone of 16 m will be                           predicted distances to relevant                       experience with the construction
                                                    established for the 190-dB zone, and 74                 thresholds in post-processing of                      operation to provide for personal safety
                                                    m for the 180 dB zone.                                  observational and acoustic data, and a                during observations;
                                                      A 200 meter shutdown zone will be                     precise accounting of observed                           (f) Writing skills sufficient to prepare
                                                    in effect for ESA-listed species for                    incidences of harassment created. This                a report of observations including but
                                                    potential acoustic disturbance caused by                information may then be used to                       not limited to the number and species
                                                    clamshell dredging. This activity has                   extrapolate observed takes to reach an                of marine mammals observed; dates and
                                                    been recorded at 124 dB peak at the 150                 approximate understanding of actual                   times when in-water construction
                                                    meter isopleth (Dickerson et al 2001).                  total takes.                                          activities were conducted; dates and
                                                    Peak SPLs are generally a few dB higher                    Monitoring Protocols—Monitoring                    times when in-water construction
                                                    than rms SPLs. In this instance, we do                  would be conducted before, during, and                activities were suspended to avoid
                                                    not know exactly what the difference                    after pile driving and removal activities.            potential incidental injury from
                                                    would be, and while this activity may                   In addition, observers shall record all               construction sound of marine mammals
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    exceed marine mammal acoustic                           incidents of marine mammal                            observed within a defined shutdown
                                                    thresholds at its source, we do not                     occurrence, regardless of distance from               zone; and marine mammal behavior;
                                                    expect this activity to rise above                      activity, and shall document any                      and
                                                    background noise in this industrial area                behavioral reactions in concert with                     (g) Ability to communicate orally, by
                                                    (see Description of Sound Sources                       distance from piles being driven or                   radio or in person, with project
                                                    section for more information), and                      removed. Observations made outside                    personnel to provide real-time
                                                    therefore do not consider take for this                 the shutdown zone will not result in                  information on marine mammals
                                                    activity. Acoustic impacts from                         shutdown; that pile segment would be                  observed in the area as necessary.


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                                                    26646                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                       (2) Prior to the start of pile driving               up will be delayed until the animal(s)                system, that is, a series of multiple rings
                                                    activity, the shutdown zone will be                     leaves the Level A harassment zone.                   placed at the bottom and at various
                                                    monitored for 15 minutes to ensure that                 Activity will begin only after the Marine             elevations around the pile. Stacked
                                                    it is clear of marine mammals. Pile                     Mammal Observer (MMO) has                             systems may be more effective than non-
                                                    driving will only commence once                         determined, through sighting, that the                stacked systems in areas with high
                                                    observers have declared the shutdown                    animal(s) has moved outside the Level                 current and deep water (Oestman et al.,
                                                    zone clear of marine mammals; animals                   A harassment zone, or if 15 minutes                   2009).
                                                    will be allowed to remain in the                        have passed without resighting the                       A confined bubble curtain contains
                                                    shutdown zone (i.e., must leave of their                animals.                                              the air bubbles within a flexible or rigid
                                                    own volition) and their behavior will be                   In addition to the measures described              sleeve made from plastic, cloth, or pipe.
                                                    monitored and documented. The                           later in this section, the MOS would                  Confined bubble curtains generally offer
                                                    shutdown zone may only be declared                      employ the following standard                         higher attenuation levels than
                                                    clear, and pile driving started, when the               mitigation measures:                                  unconfined curtains because they may
                                                    entire shutdown zone is visible (i.e.,                     (a) Conduct briefings between                      physically block sound waves and they
                                                    when not obscured by dark, rain, fog,                   construction supervisors and crews,                   prevent air bubbles from migrating away
                                                    etc.). In addition, if such conditions                  marine mammal monitoring team, and                    from the pile. For this reason, the
                                                    should arise during impact pile driving                 other staff prior to the start of all pile            confined bubble curtain is commonly
                                                    that is already underway, the activity                  driving activity, and when new                        used in areas with high current velocity
                                                    would be halted.                                        personnel join the work, in order to                  (Oestman et al., 2009).
                                                       (3) If a marine mammal approaches or                 explain responsibilities, communication                  Both environmental conditions and
                                                    enters the shutdown zone during the                     procedures, marine mammal monitoring                  the characteristics of the sound
                                                    course of pile driving operations,                      protocol, and operational procedures.                 attenuation device may influence the
                                                    activity will be halted and delayed until                  (b) For in-water heavy machinery
                                                                                                                                                                  effectiveness of the device. According to
                                                    either the animal has voluntarily left                  work other than pile driving (using, e.g.,
                                                                                                                                                                  Oestman et al. (2009):
                                                    and been visually confirmed beyond the                  standard barges, tug boats, barge-
                                                                                                                                                                     • In general, confined bubble curtains
                                                    shutdown zone or 15 minutes have                        mounted excavators, or clamshell
                                                                                                            equipment used to place or remove                     attain better sound attenuation levels in
                                                    passed without re-detection of the                                                                            areas of high current than unconfined
                                                    animal. Monitoring will be conducted                    material), if a marine mammal comes
                                                                                                            within 10 m, operations shall cease and               bubble curtains. If an unconfined device
                                                    throughout the time required to drive a                                                                       is used, high current velocity may
                                                    pile.                                                   vessels shall reduce speed to the
                                                                                                            minimum level required to maintain                    sweep bubbles away from the pile,
                                                    Ramp Up or Soft Start                                   steerage and safe working conditions.                 resulting in reduced levels of sound
                                                       The use of a soft start procedure is                    Time Restrictions—In-water work                    attenuation.
                                                    believed to provide additional                          would occur only during daylight hours,                  • Softer substrates may allow for a
                                                    protection to marine mammals by                         when visual monitoring of marine                      better seal for the device, preventing
                                                    warning or providing a chance to leave                  mammals can be conducted. To                          leakage of air bubbles and escape of
                                                    the area prior to the hammer operating                  minimize impacts to hooligan, Pacific                 sound waves. This increases the
                                                    at full capacity, and typically involves                herring, and capelin, during their                    effectiveness of the device. Softer
                                                    a requirement to initiate sound from the                spawning and migration period, all in-                substrates also provide additional
                                                    hammer at reduced energy followed by                    water pile extraction and installation                attenuation of sound traveling through
                                                    a waiting period. This procedure is                     will be suspended during this time                    the substrate.
                                                    repeated two additional times. It is                    (April 1 through May 31).                                • Flat bottom topography provides a
                                                    difficult to specify the reduction in                      Sound attenuation devices—Sound                    better seal, enhancing effectiveness of
                                                    energy for any given hammer because of                  levels can be greatly reduced during                  the sound attenuation device, whereas
                                                    variation across drivers and, for impact                impact pile driving using sound                       sloped or undulating terrain reduces or
                                                    hammers, the actual number of strikes at                attenuation devices. There are several                eliminates its effectiveness.
                                                    reduced energy will vary because                        types of sound attenuation devices                       • Air bubbles must be close to the
                                                    operating the hammer at less than full                  including bubble curtains, cofferdams,                pile; otherwise, sound may propagate
                                                    power results in ‘‘bouncing’’ of the                    and isolation casings (also called                    into the water, reducing the
                                                    hammer as it strikes the pile, resulting                temporary noise attenuation piles                     effectiveness of the device.
                                                    in multiple ‘‘strikes.’’ The project will               [TNAP]), and cushion blocks. The MOS                     • Harder substrates may transmit
                                                    utilize soft start techniques for all                   proposes to use bubble curtains and pile              ground-borne sound and propagate it
                                                    vibratory and impact pile driving. The                  caps. Pile caps include a mat that rests              into the water column.
                                                    MOS will initiate sound from vibratory                  on the piles that have been driven into                  The literature presents a wide array of
                                                    hammers for fifteen seconds at reduced                  soft or unstable ground to provide a                  observed attenuation results for bubble
                                                    energy followed by a 1-minute waiting                   suitable stable foundation, thus                      curtains (e.g., Oestman et al., 2009;
                                                    period, with the procedure repeated two                 reducing sound levels. Bubble curtains                Coleman, 2011;). The variability in
                                                    additional times. For impact driving, we                create a column of air bubbles rising                 attenuation levels is due to variation in
                                                    require an initial set of three strikes                 around a pile from the substrate to the               design, as well as differences in site
                                                    from the impact hammer at reduced                       water surface. The air bubbles absorb                 conditions and difficulty in properly
                                                    energy, followed by a 1-minute waiting                  and scatter sound waves emanating                     installing and operating in-water
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    period, then two subsequent three strike                from the pile, thereby reducing the                   attenuation devices. As a general rule,
                                                    sets. Soft start will be required at the                sound energy.                                         reductions of greater than 10 dB cannot
                                                    beginning of each day’s pile driving                       Bubble curtains may be confined or                 be reliably predicted. For 36-in piles the
                                                    work and at any time following a                        unconfined. An unconfined bubble                      average rms reduction with use of the
                                                    cessation of pile driving of thirty                     curtain may consist of a ring seated on               bubble curtain was nine dB, where the
                                                    minutes or longer.                                      the substrate and emitting air bubbles                averages of all bubble-on and bubble-off
                                                       If a marine mammal is present within                 from the bottom. An unconfined bubble                 data were compared. For 48-in piles, the
                                                    the Level A harassment zone, ramping                    curtain may also consist of a stacked                 average SPL reduction with use of a


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                             26647

                                                    bubble curtain was seven dB for average                 contractor’s discretion, in order to                     (1) Avoidance or minimization of
                                                    rms values.                                             reduce the potential for water quality                injury or death of marine mammals
                                                       To avoid loss of attenuation from                    impacts and the transport of suspended                wherever possible (goals 2, 3, and 4 may
                                                    design and implementation errors, the                   solids beyond the project dredging                    contribute to this goal).
                                                    MOS has required specific bubble                        boundaries.                                              (2) A reduction in the numbers of
                                                    curtain design specifications, including                   Because they are mostly impermeable,               marine mammals (total number or
                                                    testing requirements for air pressure and               silt curtains are easily affected by tides            number at biologically important time
                                                    flow prior to initial impact hammer use,                and currents and their effectiveness can              or location) exposed to received levels
                                                    and a requirement for placement on the                  be adversely impacted by high current                 of pile driving, or other activities
                                                    substrate. Bubble curtains shall be used                velocities, moderate to large wave                    expected to result in the take of marine
                                                    during all impact pile driving. The                     conditions, or large tidal variation. The             mammals (this goal may contribute to 1,
                                                    device will distribute air bubbles                      required height of the silt curtain will be           above, or to reducing harassment takes
                                                    around 100 percent of the piling                        determined during subsequent design to                only).
                                                    perimeter for the full depth of the water               determine a height that balances                         (3) A reduction in the number of
                                                    column, and the lowest bubble ring                      environmental protection and the                      times (total number or number at
                                                    shall be in contact with the mudline for                efficiency to maintain the silt curtain in            biologically important time or location)
                                                    the full circumference of the ring. We                  place during dredging based on tidal                  individuals would be exposed to stimuli
                                                    considered six dB as potentially the best               and current velocities in the harbor. The             expected to result in incidental take of
                                                    estimate of average SPL (rms) reduction,                effectiveness of the silt curtain will be             marine mammals (this goal may
                                                    assuming appropriate deployment and                     monitored during construction and                     contribute to 1, above, or to reducing
                                                    no problems with the equipment.                         changes may be implemented based on                   harassment takes only).
                                                    Therefore, a six dB reduction was used                  the results of monitoring to either                      (4) A reduction in the intensity of
                                                    in the MOS’s analysis of pile driving                   enhance the protection of the silt                    exposures (either total number or
                                                    noise in the environmental analyses.                    curtain or otherwise make modifications               number at biologically important time
                                                                                                            to the silt curtain configuration to                  or location to stimuli expected to result
                                                    Timing Restrictions
                                                                                                            provide for more effective dredge                     in incidental take (this goal may
                                                      In the SOT, designated timing                                                                               contribute to 1, above, or to reducing the
                                                    restrictions exist for pile driving                     operations while still meeting water
                                                                                                            quality requirements.                                 severity of harassment takes only).
                                                    activities to avoid in-water work during                                                                         (5) Avoidance or minimization of
                                                    the hooligan run in the spring (April                      Contamination sequencing involves
                                                                                                                                                                  adverse effects to marine mammal
                                                    and May) when marine mammals arrive                     prioritizing the removal of the most
                                                                                                                                                                  habitat, paying particular attention to
                                                    in huge numbers to feed. The in-water                   impacted areas (i.e., the area with the
                                                                                                                                                                  the prey base, activities that block or
                                                    work window is between July and                         highest observed concentrations of
                                                                                                                                                                  limit passage to or from biologically
                                                    October, to avoid this spawning run. All                contaminants of concern) before the
                                                                                                                                                                  important areas, permanent destruction
                                                    in-water construction activities will                   surrounding areas. Ultimately, the
                                                                                                                                                                  of habitat, or temporary destruction/
                                                    occur during daylight hours (sunrise to                 necessary phasing and sequencing of the
                                                                                                                                                                  disturbance of habitat during a
                                                    sunset)                                                 overall project (e.g., dock demolition to
                                                                                                                                                                  biologically important time.
                                                                                                            facilitate remedial dredging) must be                    (6) For monitoring directly related to
                                                    Contaminant Exposure Mitigation                         taken into consideration along with the               mitigation—an increase in the
                                                       To minimize the potential for marine                 safety of the dredging contractor.                    probability of detecting marine
                                                    mammals to be exposed to harmful or                                                                           mammals, thus allowing for more
                                                                                                            Mitigation Conclusions
                                                    toxic contaminants in the sediment                                                                            effective implementation of the
                                                    during dredging operations, mitigation                    NMFS has carefully evaluated the                    mitigation.
                                                    measures will be employed. These                        applicant’s proposed mitigation                          Based on our evaluation of the
                                                    measures include a partial height silt                  measures and considered a range of                    applicant’s proposed measures, as well
                                                    curtain and contamination sequencing.                   other measures in the context of                      as other measures considered by NMFS,
                                                    The objective when using silt curtains is               ensuring that NMFS prescribes the                     NMFS has preliminarily determined
                                                    to create a physical barrier around the                 means of affecting the least practicable              that the proposed mitigation measures
                                                    dredge equipment by protecting against                  impact on the affected marine mammal                  provide the means of effecting the least
                                                    the spread of suspended sediment that                   species and stocks and their habitat. Our             practicable impact on marine mammals
                                                    is generated during dredging operations                 evaluation of potential measures                      species or stocks and their habitat,
                                                    in the portion of the water column in                   included consideration of the following               paying particular attention to rookeries,
                                                    which the silt curtain extends. Silt                    factors in relation to one another: (1)               mating grounds, and areas of similar
                                                    curtains can be effective tools to                      The manner in which, and the degree to                significance.
                                                    minimize or reduce potential water                      which, the successful implementation of                  Proposed measures to ensure
                                                    quality impacts during dredging, when                   the measure is expected to minimize                   availability of such species or stock for
                                                    used properly and in the right site                     adverse impacts to marine mammals; (2)                taking for certain subsistence uses are
                                                    conditions. The silt curtain will be                    the proven or likely efficacy of the                  discussed later in this document (see
                                                    constructed of flexible, reinforced,                    specific measure to minimize adverse                  Impact on Availability of Affected
                                                    thermoplastic material with flotation                   impacts as planned; and (3) the                       Species or Stock for Taking for
                                                    material in the upper hem and ballast                   practicability of the measure for
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                                                                                  Subsistence Uses section).
                                                    material in the lower hem. The curtain                  applicant implementation,
                                                    will be placed in the water surrounding                   Any mitigation measure(s) prescribed                Proposed Monitoring and Reporting
                                                    the dredging operation. The                             by NMFS should be able to accomplish,                    In order to issue an IHA for an
                                                    specifications will require that the                    have a reasonable likelihood of                       activity, section 101(a)(5)(D) of the
                                                    Contractor maintain the silt curtain(s)                 accomplishing (based on current                       MMPA states that NMFS must set forth
                                                    around either the point of dredging or                  science), or contribute to the                        ‘‘requirements pertaining to the
                                                    the dredging area (and potentially other                accomplishment of one or more of the                  monitoring and reporting of such
                                                    in-water construction areas) at the                     general goals listed below:                           taking.’’ The MMPA implementing


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                                                    26648                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    regulations at 50 CFR 216.104 (a)(13)                   and MOS authorities will meet to                         • The waters will continue to be
                                                    indicate that requests for incidental take              determine the most appropriate                        scanned for at least 30 minutes after pile
                                                    authorizations must include the                         observation platform(s) for monitoring                driving has completed each day, and
                                                    suggested means of accomplishing the                    during pile installation and extraction.              after each stoppage of 30 minutes or
                                                    necessary monitoring and reporting that                    Based on our requirements, the MOS                 greater.
                                                    will result in increased knowledge of                   would implement the following
                                                                                                            procedures for pile driving:                          Data Collection
                                                    the species and of the level of taking or
                                                    impacts on populations of marine                           • Individuals meeting the minimum                     We require that observers use
                                                    mammals that are expected to be                         qualifications identified in the                      approved data forms. Among other
                                                    present in the proposed action area.                    applicant’s monitoring plan (Appendix                 pieces of information, the MOS will
                                                       Any monitoring requirement we                        A of the application) would monitor                   record detailed information about any
                                                    prescribe should improve our                            Level A and Level B harassment zones                  implementation of shutdowns,
                                                    understanding of one or more of the                     during pile driving and extraction                    including the distance of animals to the
                                                    following:                                              activities.                                           pile and description of specific actions
                                                       • Occurrence of marine mammal                           • The area within the Level B                      that ensued and resulting behavior of
                                                    species in action area (e.g., presence,                 harassment threshold for impact driving               the animal, if any. In addition, the MOS
                                                    abundance, distribution, density).                      will be monitored by appropriately                    will attempt to distinguish between the
                                                       • Nature, scope, or context of likely                stationed MMOs. Any marine mammal                     number of individual animals taken and
                                                    marine mammal exposure to potential                     documented within the Level B                         the number of incidents of take. We
                                                    stressors/impacts (individual or                        harassment zone during impact driving                 require that, at a minimum, the
                                                    cumulative, acute or chronic), through                  would constitute a Level B take                       following information be collected on
                                                    better understanding of: (1) Action or                  (harassment), and will be recorded and                the sighting forms:
                                                    environment (e.g., source                               reported as such.                                        • Date and time that monitored
                                                    characterization, propagation, ambient                     • During impact and vibratory pile                 activity begins or ends;
                                                    noise); (2) Affected species (e.g., life                driving, a shutdown zone will be                         • Construction activities occurring
                                                    history, dive patterns); (3) Co-                        established to include all areas where                during each observation period;
                                                    occurrence of marine mammal species                     the underwater SPLs are anticipated to                   • Weather parameters (e.g., percent
                                                    with the action; or (4) Biological or                   equal or exceed the Level A (injury)                  cover, visibility);
                                                    behavioral context of exposure (e.g., age,              criteria for marine mammals (180 dB                      • Water conditions (e.g., sea state,
                                                    calving or feeding areas).                              isopleth for cetaceans; 190 dB isopleth               tide state);
                                                       • Individual responses to acute                      for pinnipeds). Pile installation will not               • Species, numbers, and, if possible,
                                                    stressors, or impacts of chronic                        commence or will be suspended                         sex and age class of marine mammals;
                                                    exposures (behavioral or physiological).                temporarily if any marine mammals are                    • Description of any observable
                                                       • How anticipated responses to                       observed within or approaching the                    marine mammal behavior patterns,
                                                    stressors impact either: (1) Long-term                  area.                                                 including bearing and direction of travel
                                                    fitness and survival of an individual; or                  • The individuals will scan the                    and distance from pile driving activity;
                                                    (2) Population, species, or stock.                      waters within each monitoring zone                       • Distance from pile driving activities
                                                       • Effects on marine mammal habitat                   activity using binoculars, spotting                   to marine mammals and distance from
                                                    and resultant impacts to marine                         scopes, and visual observation.                       the marine mammals to the observation
                                                    mammals.                                                   • Use a hand-held or boat-mounted                  point;
                                                       • Mitigation and monitoring                          GPS device or rangefinder to verify the                  • Description of implementation of
                                                    effectiveness.                                          required monitoring distance from the                 mitigation measures (e.g., shutdown or
                                                       The MOS submitted a marine                           project site.                                         delay);
                                                    mammal monitoring plan as part of the                      • If poor environmental conditions                    • Locations of all marine mammal
                                                    IHA application for this project, which                 restricts the observers’ ability to make              observations; and
                                                    can be found at www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/                   observations within the marine mammal                    • Other human activity in the area.
                                                    permits/incidental/construction.htm.                    shutdown zone (e.g. excessive wind or
                                                                                                                                                                  Reporting
                                                    The plan may be modified or                             fog, high beaufort state), pile installation
                                                    supplemented based on comments or                       will cease. Pile driving will not be                     A draft report would be submitted to
                                                    new information received from the                       initiated until the entire shutdown zone              NMFS within 90 days of the completion
                                                    public during the public comment                        is visible.                                           of marine mammal monitoring, or sixty
                                                    period.                                                    • Conduct pile driving and extraction              days prior to the requested date of
                                                                                                            activities only during daylight hours                 issuance of any future IHA for projects
                                                    Visual Marine Mammal Observation                        from sunrise to sunset when it is                     at the same location, whichever comes
                                                       The MOS will collect sighting data                   possible to visually monitor marine                   first. The report will include marine
                                                    and behavioral responses to                             mammals.                                              mammal observations pre-activity,
                                                    construction for marine mammal                             • The waters will be scanned 15                    during-activity, and post-activity during
                                                    species observed in the region of                       minutes prior to commencing pile                      pile driving days, and will also provide
                                                    activity during the period of activity. All             driving at the beginning of each day,                 descriptions of any behavioral responses
                                                    observers will be trained in marine                     and prior to commencing pile driving                  to construction activities by marine
                                                    mammal identification and behaviors                     after any stoppage of 30 minutes or                   mammals and a complete description of
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    and are required to have no other                       greater. If marine mammals enter or are               all mitigation shutdowns and the results
                                                    construction-related tasks while                        observed within the designated marine                 of those actions and an extrapolated
                                                    conducting monitoring. The MOS will                     mammal shutdown zone during or 15                     total take estimate based on the number
                                                    monitor the shutdown zone and                           minutes prior to pile driving, the                    of marine mammals observed during the
                                                    disturbance zone before, during, and                    monitors will notify the on-site                      course of construction. A final report
                                                    after pile driving, with observers located              construction manager to not begin until               must be submitted within thirty days
                                                    at the best practicable vantage points.                 the animal has moved outside the                      following resolution of comments on the
                                                    The Marine Mammal Observers (MMOs)                      designated radius.                                    draft report.


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                               26649

                                                       In the unanticipated event that the                  injury or death is not associated with or             information available to characterize
                                                    specified activity clearly causes the take              related to the activities authorized in the           daily and seasonal movement and
                                                    of a marine mammal in a manner                          IHA (e.g., previously wounded animal,                 distribution of affected marine
                                                    prohibited by the IHA (if issued), such                 carcass with moderate to advanced                     mammals, it can be difficult to
                                                    as serious injury or mortality (e.g., ship-             decomposition, or scavenger damage),                  distinguish between the number of
                                                    strike, gear interaction, and/or                        the MOS would report the incident to                  individuals harassed and the instances
                                                    entanglement), the MOS would                            the Chief of the Permits and                          of harassment and, when duration of the
                                                    immediately cease the specified                         Conservation Division, Office of                      activity is considered, it can result in a
                                                    activities and immediately report the                   Protected Resources, NMFS, and the                    take estimate that overestimates the
                                                    incident to the Chief of the Permits and                NMFS West Coast Stranding Hotline                     number of individuals harassed. In
                                                    Conservation Division, Office of                        and/or by email to the Alaska Stranding               particular, for stationary activities, it is
                                                    Protected Resources, NMFS, and the                      Coordinator, within 24 hours of the                   more likely that some smaller number of
                                                    Alaska Stranding Coordinator. The                       discovery. The MOS would provide                      individuals may accrue a number of
                                                    report would include the following                      photographs or video footage (if                      incidences of harassment per individual
                                                    information:                                            available) or other documentation of the              than for each incidence to accrue to a
                                                       • Time, date, and location (latitude/                stranded animal sighting to NMFS and                  new individual, especially if those
                                                    longitude) of the incident;                             the Marine Mammal Stranding Network.                  individuals display some degree of
                                                       • Name and type of vessel involved;                  Estimated Take by Incidental
                                                                                                                                                                  residency or site fidelity and the
                                                       • Vessel’s speed during and leading                                                                        impetus to use the site (e.g., because of
                                                                                                            Harassment
                                                    up to the incident;                                                                                           foraging opportunities) is stronger than
                                                       • Description of the incident;                          Except with respect to certain                     the deterrence presented by the
                                                       • Status of all sound source use in the              activities not pertinent here, section                harassing activity.
                                                    24 hours preceding the incident;                        3(18) of the MMPA defines                                Upland work can generate airborne
                                                       • Water depth;                                       ‘‘harassment’’ as: ‘‘. . . any act of                 sound and create visual disturbance that
                                                       • Environmental conditions (e.g.,                    pursuit, torment, or annoyance which (i)              could potentially result in disturbance
                                                    wind speed and direction, Beaufort sea                  has the potential to injure a marine                  to marine mammals (specifically,
                                                    state, cloud cover, and visibility);                    mammal or marine mammal stock in the                  pinnipeds) that are hauled out or at the
                                                       • Description of all marine mammal                   wild [Level A harassment]; or (ii) has                water’s surface with heads above the
                                                    observations in the 24 hours preceding                  the potential to disturb a marine                     water. However, because any haul-outs
                                                    the incident;                                           mammal or marine mammal stock in the                  in close proximity to the SOT would be
                                                       • Species identification or                          wild by causing disruption of behavioral              subsumed in the disturbance zone,
                                                    description of the animal(s) involved;                  patterns, including, but not limited to,              incidents of incidental take resulting
                                                       • Fate of the animal(s); and                         migration, breathing, nursing, breeding,              from airborne sound or visual
                                                       • Photographs or video footage of the                feeding, or sheltering [Level B                       disturbance would already be included
                                                    animal(s) (if equipment is available).                  harassment].’’                                        in those counts.
                                                       Activities would not resume until                       All anticipated takes would be by                     In order to estimate the potential
                                                    NMFS is able to review the                              Level B harassment resulting from                     incidents of take that may occur
                                                    circumstances of the prohibited take.                   vibratory pile driving and removal.                   incidental to the specified activity, we
                                                    NMFS would work with the MOS to                         Level B harassment may result in                      must first estimate the extent of the
                                                    determine what is necessary to                          temporary changes in behavior. Note                   sound field that may be produced by the
                                                    minimize the likelihood of further                      that Level A harassment and lethal takes              activity and then consider in
                                                    prohibited take and ensure MMPA                         are not expected due to the proposed                  combination with information about
                                                    compliance. The MOS would not be                        mitigation and monitoring measures                    marine mammal density or abundance
                                                    able to resume their activities until                   that are expected to minimize the                     in the project area. We first provide
                                                    notified by NMFS via letter, email, or                  possibility of such take.                             information on applicable sound
                                                    telephone.                                                 If a marine mammal responds to a                   thresholds for determining effects to
                                                       In the event that the MOS discovers                  stimulus by changing its behavior (e.g.,              marine mammals before describing the
                                                    an injured or dead marine mammal, and                   through relatively minor changes in                   information used in estimating the
                                                    the lead MMO determines that the cause                  locomotion direction/speed or                         sound fields, the available marine
                                                    of the injury or death is unknown and                   vocalization behavior), the response                  mammal density or abundance
                                                    the death is relatively recent (i.e., in less           may or may not constitute taking at the               information, and the method of
                                                    than a moderate state of decomposition                  individual level, and is unlikely to                  estimating potential incidences of take.
                                                    as described in the next paragraph), the                affect the stock or the species as a
                                                    MOS would immediately report the                        whole. However, if a sound source                     Sound Thresholds
                                                    incident to the Chief of the Permits and                displaces marine mammals from an                         We use the following generic sound
                                                    Conservation Division, Office of                        important feeding or breeding area for a              exposure thresholds to determine when
                                                    Protected Resources, NMFS, and the                      prolonged period, impacts on animals,                 an activity that produces sound might
                                                    Alaska Stranding Coordinator.                           and if so potentially on the stock or                 result in impacts to a marine mammal
                                                       The report would include the same                    species, could potentially be significant             such that a take by harassment might
                                                    information identified in the paragraph                 (e.g., Lusseau and Bejder, 2007;                      occur. These thresholds (Table 4) are
                                                    above. Activities would be able to                      Weilgart, 2007). Given the many                       used to estimate when harassment may
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    continue while NMFS reviews the                         uncertainties in predicting the quantity              occur (i.e., when an animal is exposed
                                                    circumstances of the incident. NMFS                     and types of impacts of sound on                      to levels equal to or exceeding the
                                                    would work with the MOS to determine                    marine mammals, it is common practice                 relevant criterion) in specific contexts;
                                                    whether modifications in the activities                 to estimate how many animals are likely               however, useful contextual information
                                                    are appropriate.                                        to be present within a particular                     that may inform our assessment of
                                                       In the event that the MOS discovers                  distance of a given activity, or exposed              effects is typically lacking and we
                                                    an injured or dead marine mammal, and                   to a particular level of sound. In                    consider these thresholds as step
                                                    the lead MMO determines that the                        practice, depending on the amount of                  functions. NMFS is working to revise


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                                                    26650                                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    these acoustic guidelines; for more                               www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/acoustics/
                                                    information on that process, please visit                         guidelines.htm.

                                                                                                            TABLE 4—CURRENT ACOUSTIC EXPOSURE CRITERIA
                                                                                Criterion                                                   Criterion definition                                                             Threshold *

                                                    Level A harassment (underwater) ......................             PTS (injury) conservatively based on TTS ** ..                             190 dB RMS for pinnipeds, 180 dB RMS for
                                                                                                                                                                                                    cetaceans.
                                                    Level B harassment (underwater) ......................             Behavioral disruption .......................................              160 dB RMS (impulsive source), 120 dB RMS
                                                                                                                                                                                                    (continuous source).
                                                    Level B harassment (airborne) ...........................          Behavioral disruption .......................................              90 dB (harbor seals), 100dB (other pinnipeds)
                                                                                                                                                                                                    (unweighted).
                                                       * All decibel levels referenced to 1 micropascal (re: 1 μPa). Note all thresholds are based off root mean square (RMS) levels.
                                                       ** PTS = Permanent Threshold Shift; TTS = Temporary Threshold Shift.


                                                    Distance to Sound Thresholds                                      Department of Transportation have                                          R 2 = the distance from the driven pile
                                                       The sound field in the project area is                         compiled acoustic monitoring data for                                           of the initial measurement
                                                    the existing ambient noise plus                                   various pile-driving projects within
                                                                                                                      their respective states (WSDOT                                                A practical spreading value of fifteen
                                                    additional construction noise from the                                                                                                       is often used under conditions, such as
                                                    proposed project. The primary                                     unpublished; ICF Jones & Stokes and
                                                                                                                      Illingworth and Rodkin 2009, updated                                       at the Skagway ore terminal, where
                                                    components of the project expected to
                                                                                                                      in 2012). Upon review of these datasets,                                   water increases with depth as the
                                                    affect marine mammals is the sound
                                                                                                                      it was determined that driving                                             receiver moves away from the shoreline,
                                                    generated by impact pile driving,
                                                                                                                      moderate-sized steel piles with a                                          resulting in an expected propagation
                                                    vibratory pile driving, and vibratory pile
                                                                                                                      vibratory pile driver will generate sound                                  environment that would lie between
                                                    removal. Dredging and direct pull and
                                                                                                                      pressure levels (SPLs) of 170 dB RMS                                       spherical and cylindrical spreading loss
                                                    clamshell removal of old timber piles do
                                                                                                                      (ICF Jones & Stokes and Illingworth and                                    conditions. Practical spreading loss (4.5
                                                    not produce noise levels expected to
                                                                                                                      Rodkin 2009, updated in 2012). Noise                                       dB reduction in sound level for each
                                                    result in take of marine mammals. This
                                                                                                                      levels are on the order of 150 dB rms                                      doubling of distance) is assumed here.
                                                    activity has been recorded at 124 dB
                                                    peak at the 150 meter isopleth                                    from pile removal activities.                                                 Distances to the harassment isopleths
                                                                                                                         Underwater Sound Propagation                                            vary by pile type and size, and by pile
                                                    (Dickerson et al 2001). While this
                                                                                                                      Formula—Pile driving generates                                             extraction/driving tool. These distances
                                                    activity may exceed marine mammal
                                                                                                                      underwater noise that can potentially                                      are summarized in Table 5. Note that
                                                    acoustic thresholds at its source, we do
                                                                                                                      result in disturbance to marine                                            the actual area ensonified by pile
                                                    not expect this activity to rise above
                                                                                                                      mammals in the project area.                                               driving or removal activities is
                                                    background noise in this industrial area,
                                                                                                                      Transmission loss (TL) is the decrease                                     significantly constrained by local
                                                    and therefore do not consider take for
                                                                                                                      in acoustic intensity as an acoustic                                       topography relative to the total
                                                    this activity. Depending on conditions,
                                                                                                                      pressure wave propagates out from a                                        threshold radius. The actual ensonified
                                                    removal of timber piles may require
                                                                                                                      source. TL parameters vary with                                            area was determined using a straight
                                                    vibratory hammer removal. Impact
                                                                                                                      frequency, temperature, sea conditions,                                    line-of-sight projection from the
                                                    hammering typically generates the
                                                                                                                      current, source and receiver depth,                                        anticipated pile driving locations.
                                                    loudest noise associated with pile
                                                                                                                      water depth, water chemistry, and                                          Distances shown in Table 5 are
                                                    driving.
                                                       The project includes vibratory                                 bottom composition and topography.                                         estimated for free-field conditions, but
                                                    removal of steel piles and creosote-                              The general formula for underwater TL                                      areas are calculated per the actual
                                                    treated piles, summarized in Table 1;                             is:                                                                        conditions of the action area. See
                                                    and vibratory installation of 24-, 36-,                           TL = B * log 10 (R 1/R 2),                                                 Figures 2–5 of the MOS’s application for
                                                    48-, and 60-inch diameter steel pipe                              Where:                                                                     a depiction of areas in which each
                                                    piles, summarized in Table 2. The                                 TL = transmission loss in dB                                               underwater sound threshold is
                                                    Washington State Department of                                    R 1 = the distance of the modeled SPL                                      predicted to occur at the project area
                                                    Transportation (WSDOT) and California                                  from the driven pile, and                                             due to pile driving or removal.

                                                                  TABLE 5—DISTANCES TO RELEVANT UNDERWATER SOUND THRESHOLDS AND AREAS OF ENSONIFICATION
                                                                                                                                                               Distance to criterion
                                                                                                                                                                       (m)
                                                                                                          Pile size                                                                                                                            Area
                                                                      Pile type                              (in)                                          Level A                    Level A                                                  (km2)
                                                                                                                                Level B                                                                       Continuous
                                                                                                                                                         cetaceans                   pinnipeds
                                                                                                                               (160 dB)                                                                        (120dB)
                                                                                                                                                          (180 dB)                   (190 dB)
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    Impact ..........................................                 24                  1,848                           86                         18     ........................   3.93, 0.072, 0.031.*
                                                                                                                      36                  1,585                           74                         16     ........................   3.00, 0.064, 0.029.*
                                                                                                                      48                  2,154                         100                          22     ........................   4.96, 0.082, 0.033.*
                                                    Vibratory .......................................                 60   ........................   ........................   ........................              100,000         21.
                                                    Vibratory removal .........................                       12   ........................   ........................   ........................                  1,600       3.05.
                                                       * Values are for 160 dB, 180 dB, and 190 dB, respectively.




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                                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                                                                 26651

                                                    Marine Mammal Densities                                                   on an average production rate of 73 days                                   represents the number of individuals
                                                       Density data are only available for                                    of vibratory and impact driving and 39                                     that may be taken by the specified
                                                    harbor seals for this area of Alaska.                                     days of pile removal. Note that impact                                     activity. In fact, in the context of
                                                    Potential exposures to impact and                                         driving is likely to occur only on days                                    stationary activities such as pile driving
                                                    vibratory pile driving noise for each                                     when vibratory driving occurs.                                             and in areas where resident animals
                                                    threshold for all other marine mammals                                      • All marine mammal individuals                                          may be present, this number represents
                                                    were estimated using published reports                                    potentially available are assumed to be                                    the number of instances of take that may
                                                    of group sizes and population estimates,                                  present within the relevant area, and                                      occur to a small number of individuals,
                                                    and anecdotal observational reports                                       thus incidentally taken;                                                   with a notably smaller number of
                                                    from local commercial entities. It is not                                   • An individual can only be taken                                        animals being exposed more than once
                                                    currently possible to identify all                                        once during a 24-h period; and,                                            per individual. While pile driving can
                                                    observed individuals to stock. All                                          • Exposures to sound levels at or                                        occur any day throughout the in-water
                                                    estimates are conservative and include                                    above the relevant thresholds equate to                                    work window, and the analysis is
                                                    the following assumptions:                                                take, as defined by the MMPA.
                                                                                                                                                                                                         conducted on a per day basis, only a
                                                       • All pilings installed at each site                                     The estimation of marine mammal
                                                                                                                                                                                                         fraction of that time (typically a matter
                                                    would have an underwater noise                                            takes typically uses the following
                                                                                                                              calculation:                                                               of hours on any given day) is actually
                                                    disturbance equal to the piling that
                                                    causes the greatest noise disturbance                                     Level B exposure estimate = N (number of                                   spent pile driving. The potential
                                                    (i.e., the piling farthest from shore)                                        animals) in the ensonified area * Number                               effectiveness of mitigation measures in
                                                    installed with the method that has the                                        of days of noise generating activities                                 reducing the number of takes is
                                                    largest ZOI. The largest underwater                                         There are a number of reasons why                                        typically not quantified in the take
                                                    disturbance ZOI would be produced by                                      estimates of potential incidents of take                                   estimation process. For these reasons,
                                                    vibratory driving steel piles. The ZOIs                                   may be overestimates of the number of                                      these take estimates may be
                                                    for each threshold are not spherical and                                  individuals taken, assuming that                                           conservative, especially if each take is
                                                    are truncated by land masses on either                                    available abundance estimates and                                          considered a separate individual
                                                    side of the channel which would                                           estimated ZOI areas are accurate. We                                       animal, and especially for pinnipeds.
                                                    dissipate sound pressure waves.                                           assume, in the absence of information                                      See Table 6 for total estimated incidents
                                                       • Exposures were based on estimated                                    supporting a more refined conclusion,                                      of take.
                                                    work days. Numbers of days were based                                     that the output of the calculation

                                                                                                           TABLE 6—CALCULATIONS FOR INCIDENTAL TAKE ESTIMATION
                                                                                                                                                                          N (animals) in                                        Proposed authorized takes
                                                                                                                                                                                                       Number of
                                                                                                       Species                                                            the ensonified             days of activity
                                                                                                                                                                               area                                              Level A         Level B

                                                    Harbor Seal ......................................................................................................                        44                         74                0          2,272
                                                    Steller sea lion .................................................................................................                        32                         74                0          1,184
                                                    Humpback whale .............................................................................................                               2                         42                0             84
                                                    Killer whale ......................................................................................................                       15                          4                0             60
                                                    Harbor porpoise ...............................................................................................                            2                         84                0            168
                                                    Dall’s porpoise .................................................................................................                          3                         15                0             45
                                                    Minke whale .....................................................................................................                          0                          0                0              0

                                                          Total exposures ........................................................................................        ........................   ........................              0          3,813



                                                    Description of Marine Mammals in the                                      over the past five years. The latest stock                                 maximum local abundance of harbor
                                                    Area of the Specified Activity                                            assessment analysis indicates that there                                   seals.
                                                                                                                              is a 71 percent probability that the stock                                    Because harbor seal numbers decrease
                                                    Harbor Seals                                                                                                                                         after the spring hooligan spawning run,
                                                                                                                              has declined by 1.8 percent over this
                                                       There are no documented long-term                                      period (Muto and Angliss 2015). Using                                      we estimate that the number of local
                                                    haulout sites for harbor seals in Taiya                                   seal stock assessment data from within                                     animals within the behavioral zones is
                                                    Inlet; however, seasonal haulouts are                                     the Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage stock,                                     estimated to be eight animals (one half
                                                    present within five miles of the project                                  the calculated density of this stock is 1.7                                of the mean range within the lower
                                                    area at Seal Cove and at the mouth of                                     animals per square kilometer (total                                        inlet). This estimate is based on the
                                                    the Taiya River. During the spring run                                    population divided by total area). This                                    conservative assumption that about half
                                                    of hooligan in April and May, 20 to over                                  density was applied to the area within                                     of the animals hauled out at Seal Cove
                                                    100 individual animals have been                                          the behavioral impact zone for vibratory                                   and the Taiya River mouth may be
                                                    observed in these areas, with animals                                     driving (21 square kilometers, which                                       transiting through the behavioral zone
                                                    within inner Taiya Inlet actively                                         includes most of Taiya Inlet) for a total                                  for vibratory driving at any given time
                                                    feeding. After the spawning run, much                                     of 36 animals in the whole of Taiya                                        during the summer (14 days), for a total
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    lower numbers of harbor seals are                                         Inlet. These animals are mostly on                                         of 112 takes. The haulouts themselves
                                                    present. Local observers have found that                                  haulouts in the vicinity of Seal Cove,                                     are outside of the behavioral impact
                                                    very few, if any; harbors seals are                                       swimming in areas near the waterfront,                                     zones, approximately five miles from
                                                    present during the winter (R. Ford and                                    and hauled out at the mouth of the                                         the project area. No exposure to the
                                                    K. Gross, personal communications).                                       Taiya River. Proposed pile driving will                                    injury zone is expected because of the
                                                    Harbor seals within the Lynn Canal/                                       occur in March, and in July through                                        mitigation measures designed to prevent
                                                    Stephens Passage stock have maintained                                    October, avoiding the hooligan                                             Level A harassment. It is expected that
                                                    a steady to slightly declining population                                 spawning run and the period of                                             the marine mammal monitoring


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                                                    26652                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    program will significantly prevent                      portion of the hauled out seals may                   Dall’s Porpoise
                                                    injury take in this zone. Based on                      enter Taiya inlet during the salmon                      Dall’s porpoise are widely distributed
                                                    calculated density estimates mentioned                  runs, we estimated that 16 Steller sea                across the entire North Pacific Ocean.
                                                    above, all 36 animals will be exposed to                lions (half of the mean found on Taiya                Throughout most of the eastern North
                                                    the continuous noise behavioral zone,                   Rocks during the hooligan run) will be                Pacific they are present during all
                                                    which includes most of Taiya Inlet for                  present within Taiya Inlet during any                 months of the year, although there may
                                                    all days when pile driving activities are               given time while pile driving and pile                be seasonal onshore-offshore
                                                    expected to occur (60 days) for a total                 removal operations are occurring in the               movements along the west coast of the
                                                    of 2,160 takes during this time period.                 summer and fall (60 and 14 days,                      continental United States and winter
                                                    Total requested harbor seal takes is                    respectively), for a total of 1,184 total             movements of populations out of Prince
                                                    2,272.                                                  takes for Steller sea lions. Exposure to              William Sound and areas in the Gulf of
                                                    Steller Sea Lion                                        pile-driving and removal activities                   Alaska and Bering Sea (Allen and
                                                                                                            during the winter is not expected to                  Angliss 2014).
                                                       There are several long-term Steller sea
                                                    lion haulouts in Lynn Canal but none                    occur. No Steller sea lions are expected                 Dahlheim et al. (2009) found Dall’s
                                                    occur in Taiya Inlet. The nearest long-                 to be exposed to the small injury zone                porpoise throughout Southeast Alaska,
                                                    term Steller sea lion haulout is located                near the facility. If any do appear, the              with concentrations of animals
                                                    at Gran Point, in the vicinity of Haines                marine mammal monitoring program                      consistently found in Lynn Canal,
                                                    approximately 20 miles south of                         would effectively prevent take.                       Stephens Passage, Icy Strait, upper
                                                    Skagway. Other year-round haulouts in                                                                         Chatham Strait, Frederick Sound, and
                                                                                                            Harbor Porpoises                                      Clarence Strait. Local observers have
                                                    Lynn Canal are present at Met Point,
                                                    Benjamin Island, and Little Island,                        Harbor porpoise primarily frequent                 observed only three to six Dall’s
                                                    closer to Juneau (Fritz et al. 2015). A                 coastal waters, and in the Gulf of Alaska             porpoises in Taiya Inlet during the early
                                                    seasonal haulout site is located on Taiya               and Southeast Alaska, they occur most                 spring and late fall. Observations have
                                                    Point rocks at the southern tip of Taiya                frequently in waters less than 100                    been occasional to sporadic, not
                                                    Inlet. Estimates of 25 to 40 animals use                meters (Dahlheim et al. 2009). Within                 occurring daily. The species has not
                                                    this haulout for about three weeks                      the inland waters of Southeast Alaska,                been observed near the waterfront, and
                                                    during the hooligan run, during which                   the harbor porpoise distribution is                   no animals have been observed during
                                                    they frequent the inlet (K. Gross,                                                                            the winter (K. Gross, personal
                                                                                                            clumped, with greatest densities
                                                    personal communication). However,                                                                             communication). This is consistent with
                                                                                                            observed in the Glacier Bay/Icy Strait
                                                    most animals leave the inlet shortly                                                                          Dahlheim et al. (2009), who have only
                                                                                                            region, and near Zarembo and Wrangell
                                                    after the hooligan run and are scarce                                                                         documented this species in Lynn Canal
                                                                                                            Islands and the adjacent waters of
                                                    after about the first week in June. Sea                                                                       as far north as Haines, Alaska, about 15
                                                                                                            Sumner Strait (Allen and Angliss 2014).
                                                    lions are rarely observed in the inlet                                                                        miles south of Skagway and 5 miles
                                                                                                            Dedicated research studies of harbor
                                                    during the winter. This is consistent                                                                         south of the continuous noise
                                                                                                            porpoise in this area only occur as far
                                                    with the National Marine Mammal                                                                               behavioral impact zone. The mean
                                                                                                            north in Lynn Canal as Haines during                  group size of Dall’s porpoise in
                                                    Laboratory database (Fritz et al., 2015),               the summer (Dahlheim et al., 2009;
                                                    which has identified the largest number                                                                       Southeast Alaska is estimated at three
                                                                                                            2015); approximately 16 miles south of                individuals (Dahlheim et al. 2009). For
                                                    of Lynn Canal sea lions during the fall                 SOT. Group sizes were on average,
                                                    and winter months at Benjamin Island                                                                          the purposes of this analysis, we
                                                                                                            between 1.37–1.59 animals (less than 2)               estimate that three animals will be
                                                    in the lower reaches of the canal.
                                                       Taiya Point Rocks are located                        (Dahlheim et al., 2009; 2015). In Lynn                present in outer Taiya Inlet for the latter
                                                    approximately 12 miles south of                         Canal, observations were less frequent,               half of the summer pile-driving period.
                                                    Skagway and 1.3 miles outside of the                    primarily in lower Lynn Canal from                    Since observations during the fall have
                                                    continuous noise vibratory behavioral                   Chatham Strait to Juneau. The species                 been occasional, we also assume a
                                                    impact zone. Given that sea lion                        has been observed as far north as Haines              presence in the inlet every other day, for
                                                    presence in Taiya Inlet occurs during                   during the summer (Dahlheim et al.,                   a total of 15 days of exposure, and 45
                                                    the hooligan run, during which no pile                  2009, Dalheim et al., 2015). Encounters               total takes. Exposure to the behavioral
                                                    driving will occur, and the nearest                     of small groups of two or three animals               disturbance zone from impact pile
                                                    haulout site is outside of the behavioral               have been reported by local vessel                    driving or pile removal is not likely to
                                                    impact zone, it is expected that Steller                charters from spring through fall in                  occur, because the species has rarely
                                                    sea lion exposure to pile driving will be               Taiya Inlet. Observations have been                   been observed in areas close to the
                                                    low. This is similar to observations from               frequent, but not on a daily basis. The               waterfront.
                                                    local observers, who have reported one                  mean group size of harbor porpoise in
                                                    to three sea lions in Taiya Inlet outside               Southeast Alaska is estimated at two                  Killer Whales
                                                    of the hooligan spawning run (K. Gross,                 individuals (Dahlheim et al. 2009). For                 Resident and transient killer whales
                                                    personal communication). Sea lions                      the purposes of this analysis it is                   have been documented in the middle to
                                                    have been observed in greater numbers                   estimated that two harbor porpoises will              lower reaches of Lynn Canal, but not
                                                    in nearby Lutak Inlet in the fall during                be present in Taiya Inlet, but because                within the upper reaches or in Taiya
                                                    salmon runs, and at the Gran Point                      observations do not occur daily, we                   Inlet (Dahlheim et al., 2009). Two
                                                    haulout near Haines. These observations                 estimate their presence within the inlet              resident pods identified as AF and AG
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    and data suggest that it is reasonable to               on 75 percent of days during the pile                 pods were frequently encountered
                                                    expect more sea lions to travel into                    driving period (84 days) for a total of               throughout Icy Strait, Lynn Canal,
                                                    Taiya Inlet (J. Womble, personal                        168 take exposures. Exposure to the                   Stephens Passage, Frederick Sound and
                                                    communication). There have been no                      behavioral disturbance zone from                      upper Chatham Strait (Dahlheim et al.,
                                                    observations of Steller sea lions in Taiya              impact pile driving or pile removal is                2009). The seasonality of resident killer
                                                    Inlet during the winter. Because Steller                not likely to occur, because the species              whales could not be investigated
                                                    sea lions are sparse at times outside of                has rarely been observed in areas close               statistically owing to low encounter
                                                    the hooligan spawning run, but a                        to the waterfront.                                    rates. Mean group size of resident


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                             26653

                                                    whales did not vary significantly among                 sometimes fairly close to the Skagway                 Specifically, the specified activities may
                                                    seasons and ranged from 19 to 33                        waterfront. In 2015, only one whale was               result in take, in the form of Level B
                                                    individuals.                                            observed for a few weeks close to                     harassment (behavioral disturbance),
                                                       Transient killer whales were found in                Skagway. On average, four to five                     from underwater sounds generated from
                                                    all major waterways, including Lynn                     individuals may occur near the town                   pile driving and removal. Potential takes
                                                    Canal in open-strait environments, near-                during the spring hooligan run, after                 could occur if individuals of these
                                                    shore waters, protected bays and inlets,                which, only a few individuals are                     species are present in the ensonified
                                                    and in ice-laden waters near tidewater                  observed on and off through the summer                zone when pile driving and removal are
                                                    glaciers (Dahlheim et al. 2009).                        (K. Gross, personal communication). No                under way.
                                                    Dahlheim et al. (2009) found that                       pile driving will occur during the spring                The takes from Level B harassment
                                                    transient killer whale mean group size                  hooligan run. For the purpose of this                 will be due to potential behavioral
                                                    ranged from four to six individuals in                  analysis, because humpback whale                      disturbance and TTS. No mortality is
                                                    Southeast Alaska. Transient killer whale                occurrence is rare and generally occurs               anticipated given the nature of the
                                                    numbers were highest in summer, with                    in the spring when construction will not              activity and measures designed to
                                                    lower numbers observed in spring and                    occur, it is estimated that two                       minimize the possibility of injury to
                                                    fall. Although this stock’s range                       humpback whales may be present over                   marine mammals. The potential for
                                                    includes southeast Alaska, it has only                  two 3-week periods (42 days) during the               these outcomes is minimized through
                                                    been documented as far north as Lynn                    summer, for a total of 84 takes. Exposure             the construction method and the
                                                    Canal; therefore, while possible,                       to the behavioral disturbance zone from               implementation of the planned
                                                    occurrence north of Lynn Canal into                     impact pile driving or pile removal is                mitigation measures (see Proposed
                                                    Taiya Inlet is rare.                                    not likely to occur, because the species              Mitigation section). Vibratory driving
                                                       Local observations indicate that                     has rarely been observed in areas close               does not have significant potential to
                                                    resident pods occasionally enter Taiya                  to the waterfront.                                    cause injury to marine mammals due to
                                                    Inlet, usually a group of 15 to 20                                                                            the relatively low source levels
                                                    animals. These animals are typically                    Analysis and Preliminary                              produced and the lack of potentially
                                                    observed only a few times a year (K.                    Determinations                                        injurious source characteristics. Impact
                                                    Gross, personal communication). In                      Negligible Impact                                     driving does have the potential to injure
                                                    2015 a resident pod was only observed                                                                         marine mammals; however; the marine
                                                    in Taiya Inlet twice, remaining for one                    NMFS has defined ‘‘negligible                      mammal detection ability by trained
                                                    to four days per visit (K. Gross, personal              impact’’ in 50 CFR 216.103 as ‘‘. . . an              observers is high under the
                                                    communication). Based on these                          impact resulting from the specified                   environmental conditions described for
                                                    observations, we conservatively used                    activity that cannot be reasonably                    the reconstruction of the SOT, which
                                                    the larger group size for all killer whale              expected to, and is not reasonably likely             further enables the implementation of
                                                    stocks (Northern residents), and the                    to, adversely affect the species or stock             shutdowns to limit injury, serious
                                                    likelihood of stocks being present, to                  through effects on annual rates of                    injury, or mortality.
                                                    estimate a maximum of 60 killer whale                   recruitment or survival.’’ A negligible                  The MOS’s proposed activities are
                                                    takes (e.g. for Northern residents, at                  impact finding is based on the lack of                localized and of relatively short
                                                    most, 15 killer whales may enter the                    likely adverse effects on annual rates of             duration (maximum 73 days for pile
                                                    inlet on two occasions during the                       recruitment or survival (i.e., population-            driving activities; 39 days for pile
                                                    summer, remaining in the inlet for two                  level effects). An estimate of the number             removal, and a maximum of 40 days of
                                                    days per visit. All other stocks would                  of Level B harassment takes alone is not              dredging). The entire project area is
                                                    likely be smaller in group size, and not                enough information on which to base an                limited to the SOT area and its
                                                    occur as frequently).                                   impact determination. In addition to                  immediate surroundings. These
                                                                                                            considering estimates of the number of                localized and short-term noise
                                                    Humpback Whale                                          marine mammals that might be ‘‘taken’’                exposures may cause short-term
                                                       Humpback whales are the most                         through behavioral harassment, we                     behavioral modifications in harbor
                                                    commonly observed baleen whale in the                   consider other factors, such as the likely            seals, Steller sea lions, killer whales,
                                                    area and surrounding Southeast Alaska,                  nature of any responses (e.g., intensity,             harbor porpoises, Dall’s porpoises, and
                                                    particularly during spring and summer                   duration), the context of any responses               humpback whales. Moreover, the
                                                    months. Humpback whales in Alaska,                      (e.g., critical reproductive time or                  proposed mitigation and monitoring
                                                    although not limited to these areas,                    location, migration), as well as the                  measures, including injury shutdowns,
                                                    return to specific feeding locations such               number and nature of estimated Level A                soft start techniques, and multiple
                                                    as Frederick Sound, Chatham Strait,                     harassment takes, the number of                       MMOs monitoring the behavioral and
                                                    North Pass, Sitka Sound, Glacier Bay,                   estimated mortalities, and effects on                 injury zones for marine mammal
                                                    Point Adolphus, and Prince William                      habitat.                                              presence, are expected to reduce the
                                                    Sound, as well as other similar coastal                    To avoid repetition, the discussion of             likelihood of injury and behavior
                                                    areas (Wing and Krieger 1983). In Lynn                  our analyses applies generally to all the             exposures. Additionally, no important
                                                    Canal they have been observed in the                    species listed in Table 3, given that the             feeding and/or reproductive areas for
                                                    spring and fall from Haines to Juneau.                  anticipated effects of this pile driving              marine mammals are known to be
                                                    Scientific surveys have not documented                  project on marine mammals are                         within the ensonification areas of the
                                                    the species within Taiya Inlet                          expected to be relatively similar in                  proposed action area during the
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    (Dahlheim et al., 2009). The humpback                   nature. Where there are species-specific              construction time frame.
                                                    whale population in Southeast Alaska                    factors that have been considered, they                  The project also is not expected to
                                                    appears to be increasing with estimates                 are identified below.                                 have significant adverse effects on
                                                    of 547 animals in the mid-1980s                            Pile extraction and pile driving,                  affected marine mammals’ habitat. The
                                                    (Angliss and Outlaw 2005) and 961                       activities associated with the                        project activities would not modify
                                                    animals in 2000 (Straley et al., 2002).                 reconstruction of the SOT, as outlined                existing marine mammal habitat for a
                                                       Local observers have reported                        previously, have the potential to disturb             significant amount of time. The
                                                    humpback whales in Taiya Inlet,                         or displace marine mammals.                           activities may cause some fish to leave


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                                                    26654                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    the area of disturbance, thus temporarily               consideration the implementation of the               will enter the disturbance zone once or
                                                    impacting marine mammals’ foraging                      proposed monitoring and mitigation                    twice during the course of the project.
                                                    opportunities in a limited portion of the               measures, NMFS preliminarily finds                    Therefore, we can conservatively
                                                    foraging range; but, because of the short               that the total marine mammal take from                estimate that, because of the gregarious
                                                    duration of the activities and the                      the MOS’s reconstruction of the SOT                   nature of killer whales, a single pod of
                                                    relatively small area of the habitat that               will have a negligible impact on the                  resident (15–20) killer whales may
                                                    may be affected, the impacts to marine                  affected marine mammal species or                     occur in the disturbance zone once or
                                                    mammal habitat are not expected to                      stocks.                                               twice during the course of the project.
                                                    cause significant or long-term negative                                                                       All other stocks are rare in this area;
                                                                                                            Small Numbers Analysis
                                                    consequences.                                                                                                 however their range includes southeast
                                                       Effects on individuals that are taken                   Table 7 demonstrates the number of                 Alaska, and therefore they may occur in
                                                    by Level B harassment, on the basis of                  animals that could be exposed to                      the upper reaches of Lynn Canal into
                                                    reports in the literature as well as                    received noise levels that could cause                Taiya inlet towards Skagway, albeit
                                                    monitoring from other similar activities,               Level B behavioral harassment for the                 infrequently. Because of this, it is
                                                    will likely be limited to reactions such                proposed work at the SOT project site.                assumed that the Northern resident
                                                    as increased swimming speeds,                           The numbers of animals authorized to                  stock is the stock most likely to be
                                                    increased surfacing time, or decreased                  be taken for all species would be                     affected. However, there is a small
                                                    foraging (if such activity were occurring)              considered small relative to the relevant             chance that a small number of
                                                    (e.g., Thorson and Reyff, 2006; Lerma,                  stocks or populations even if each                    individuals of other stocks may be
                                                    2014). Most likely, individuals will                    estimated taking occurred to a new                    potentially affected. For example,
                                                    simply move away from the sound                         individual—an extremely unlikely                      transient stocks have only been
                                                    source and be temporarily displaced                     scenario. The total percent of the                    observed in Lynn Canal (outside of the
                                                    from the areas of pile driving, although                population for which take is requested                area of ensonification), so it likely that—
                                                    even this reaction has been observed                    is less than one percent for humpback                 if this stock were to enter the area of
                                                    primarily only in association with                      whales (Central North Pacific stock),                 ensonification— the number of
                                                    impact pile driving. Repeated exposures                 and less than 2.5 percent for affected                transients exposed would be much
                                                    of individuals to levels of sound that                  stocks of Steller sea lions (eDPS and                 smaller than the take estimate for all
                                                    may cause Level B harassment are                        wDPS) and harbor porpoise (Southeast                  killer whales (e.g. average group size of
                                                    unlikely to result in permanent hearing                 Alaska stock). The most recent                        4–6 individuals with few occurrences in
                                                    impairment or to significantly disrupt                  abundance estimate (83,400) for the
                                                                                                                                                                  the area), and would therefore be a
                                                    foraging behavior due to the lack of                    affected stock of Dall’s porpoise (Alaska
                                                                                                                                                                  smaller percentage of the stock
                                                    quality foraging habitat near the ore                   stock) is over 20 years old (Allen and
                                                                                                                                                                  abundance than what is calculated by
                                                    terminal. Thus, even repeated Level B                   Angliss 2012); therefore, the stock size
                                                                                                                                                                  comparing the total authorized take for
                                                    harassment of some small subset of the                  is unknown for Dall’s porpoise. The
                                                                                                                                                                  all killer whales to the abundance of
                                                    overall stock is unlikely to result in any              total percent of the population for
                                                                                                                                                                  this stock. Therefore, we assume that
                                                    significant realized decrease in fitness                which take is requested is therefore also
                                                                                                                                                                  the 60 takes will actually affect a
                                                    for the affected individuals, and thus                  unknown; however, the 45 total take
                                                                                                                                                                  smaller number of the same individuals
                                                    would not result in any adverse impact                  requests is a small enough number that
                                                                                                                                                                  of killer whales from any stock.
                                                    to the stock as a whole.                                it would be considered a small percent
                                                       In summary, this negligible impact                   of this stock, which we know is fairly                   Take requests are assumed to include
                                                    analysis is founded on the following                    large based on anecdotal information.                 multiple harassments of the same
                                                    factors: (1) The possibility of non-                    For killer whales (Alaska stock,                      individual(s), resulting in estimates of
                                                    auditory injury, serious injury, or                     Northern resident stock, Gulf of Alaska               Take Request Percent of Stock that are
                                                    mortality may reasonably be considered                  stock, and West Coast transient stock)                high compared to actual take that will
                                                    discountable; (2) the anticipated                       and harbor seals (Lynn Canal/Stephens                 occur. This is the case with the harbor
                                                    instances of Level B harassment consist                 Passage stock), the percentage of the                 seal (Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage
                                                    of, at worst, temporary modifications in                stock for which take is requested is less             stock). As reported, a small number of
                                                    behavior or potential TTS and; (3) the                  than 25 percent for all affected stocks.              harbor seals, most of which reside in
                                                    presumed efficacy of the proposed                       For pinnipeds, especially harbor seals                Taiya Inlet year-round, will be exposed
                                                    mitigation measures in reducing the                     occurring in the vicinity of the SOT,                 to vibratory pile driving and removal for
                                                    effects of the specified activity to the                there will almost certainly be some                   nearly 4 months. The total population
                                                    level of least practicable impact. In                   overlap in individuals present day-to-                estimate in the Lynn Canal/Stephens
                                                    combination, we believe that these                      day, and these takes are likely to occur              Passage stock is 9,478 animals over 1.37
                                                    factors, as well as the available body of               only within some small portion of the                 million acres of area. This is a density
                                                    evidence from other similar activities,                 overall regional stock.                               of 36 animals within Taiya Inlet. The
                                                    demonstrate that the potential effects of                  The total authorized take for killer               largest Level B harassment Zone within
                                                    the specified activity will have only                   whales as compared to each potentially                the inlet occupies 21.0 square
                                                    short-term effects on individuals. The                  affected stock ranges from 2.7% to                    kilometers, which represents less than
                                                    specified activity is not reasonably                    24.7% of each population. In reality, it              0.4 percent of the total geographical area
                                                    expected to and is not reasonably likely                is highly unlikely that 60 individuals of             occupied by the stock. The great
                                                    to adversely affect the marine mammal                   any one killer whale stock will not be                majority of these exposures will be to
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    species or stocks through effects on                    temporarily harassed. Instead, it is                  the same animals that have habituated
                                                    annual rates of recruitment or survival                 assumed that there will be a relatively               to pile driving and pile removal
                                                    and will therefore not result in                        short period of takes of a smaller                    activities within the inlet and the
                                                    population-level impacts.                               number of the same individuals from                   general port activities associated with
                                                       Based on the analysis contained                      any stock. We make this assumption                    the Skagway waterfront. Given that the
                                                    herein of the likely effects of the                     because resident pods are known to                    Taiya Inlet area represents less than 0.4
                                                    specified activity on marine mammals                    occasionally frequent Taiya Inlet. It is              percent of the total stock area, broader
                                                    and their habitat, and taking into                      possible that all or part of these pods               impacts to this stock are highly


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                                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                                                                        26655

                                                    unlikely. In addition, marine mammal                                       Based on the analysis contained                                        number of marine mammals potentially
                                                    monitoring for the project can provide                                   herein of the likely effects of the                                      affected by the proposed action, NMFS
                                                    an early alert in the unlikely event that                                specified activity on marine mammals                                     finds that small numbers of marine
                                                    cumulative exposure of seals residing in                                 and their habitat, and taking into                                       mammals will be taken relative to the
                                                    the area is leading to adverse behavioral                                consideration the implementation of the                                  populations of the affected species or
                                                    or physical effects.                                                     mitigation and monitoring measures,                                      stocks.
                                                                                                                             which are expected to reduce the

                                                           TABLE 7—ESTIMATED NUMBERS AND PERCENTAGE OF STOCK THAT MAY BE EXPOSED TO LEVEL B HARASSMENT
                                                                                                                                                                                                     Proposed                    Stock(s)            Percentage of
                                                                                                                   Species                                                                           authorized                abundance              total stock
                                                                                                                                                                                                       takes                    estimate 1

                                                    Harbor Seal (Phoca vitulina) .......................................................................................................                        2,272        9,478 ..............               24
                                                    Lynn Canal/Stephens Passage Stock .........................................................................................
                                                    Steller Sea Lion (Eumetopias jubatus)
                                                         wDPS Stock .........................................................................................................................                    1,184       49,497 ............               2.4
                                                         eDPS Stock ..........................................................................................................................    ........................   60,131 ............               2.0
                                                    Harbor Porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) Southeast Alaska Stock ..............................................                                                       168      11,146 ............               1.5
                                                    Dall’s porpoise (Phocoenidae dalli) Alaska Stock .......................................................................                                          45     unknown ........                  n/a
                                                    Killer Whale (Orcinus orca)
                                                         Alaska stock .........................................................................................................................   ........................   2,347 ..............              2.6
                                                         Northern resident stock ........................................................................................................                             60     261 .................              23
                                                         Gulf of Alaska stock .............................................................................................................       ........................   587 .................            10.2
                                                         West coast transient stock ...................................................................................................           ........................   243 .................            24.7
                                                    Humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) Central North Pacific Stock .................................                                                             84     10,252 ............              0.82
                                                       1 All   stock abundance estimates presented here are from the draft 2015 Alaska Stock Assessment Report.


                                                       Based on the analysis contained                                       Endangered Species Act (ESA)                                             Proposed Incidental Harassment
                                                    herein of the likely effects of the                                                                                                               Authorization
                                                    specified activity on marine mammals                                        There are two marine mammal
                                                                                                                             species that are listed as endangered                                      As a result of these preliminary
                                                    and their habitat, and taking into                                                                                                                determinations, we propose to issue an
                                                    consideration the implementation of the                                  under the ESA with confirmed or
                                                                                                                             possible occurrence in the study area:                                   IHA to the MOS for conducting the
                                                    mitigation and monitoring measures,                                                                                                               Skagway Gateway Initiative Project,
                                                    which are expected to reduce the                                         humpback whales and western DPS of
                                                                                                                                                                                                      provided the previously mentioned
                                                    number of marine mammals potentially                                     Steller sea lions. Under section 7 of the
                                                                                                                                                                                                      mitigation, monitoring, and reporting
                                                    affected by the proposed action, NMFS                                    ESA, the United States Army Corps of                                     requirements are incorporated. The
                                                    preliminarily finds that small numbers                                   Engineers (USACE) has begun                                              proposed IHA language is provided
                                                    of marine mammals will be taken                                          consultation with NMFS on the                                            next.
                                                    relative to the populations of the                                       proposed pile driving activities. NMFS                                     This section contains a draft of the
                                                    affected species or stocks.                                              will also consult internally on the                                      IHA. The wording contained in this
                                                                                                                             issuance of an IHA under section                                         section is proposed for inclusion in the
                                                    Impact on Availability of Affected                                       101(a)(5)(D) of the MMPA for this                                        IHA (if issued).
                                                    Species for Taking for Subsistence Uses                                  activity. Consultation will be concluded                                   1. This Incidental Harassment
                                                                                                                             prior to a determination on the issuance                                 Authorization (IHA) is valid from July 1,
                                                       Alaska Natives have traditionally                                                                                                              2016 through June 30, 2017.
                                                                                                                             of an IHA.
                                                    harvested subsistence resources in                                                                                                                  2. This Authorization is valid only for
                                                    Alaska for many hundreds of years,                                       National Environmental Policy Act                                        in-water construction work associated
                                                    particularly Steller sea lions and harbor                                (NEPA)                                                                   with the Skagway Gateway Initiative
                                                    seals. The proposed Project will occur                                                                                                            Project at the Skagway Ore Terminal.
                                                    near but not overlap the subsistence                                        NMFS is preparing an Environmental
                                                                                                                                                                                                        3. General Conditions.
                                                    area used by the villages of Hoonah and                                  Assessment (EA) in accordance with the
                                                                                                                                                                                                        (a) A copy of this IHA must be in the
                                                    Angoon (Wolfe et al. 2013). Since all                                    National Environmental Policy Act                                        possession of the MOS, its designees,
                                                    project activities will take place within                                (NEPA) and will consider comments                                        and work crew personnel operating
                                                    the immediate vicinity of the SOT, the                                   submitted in response to this notice as                                  under the authority of this IHA.
                                                    project will not have an adverse impact                                  part of that process. The EA will be                                       (b) The species authorized for taking
                                                    on the availability of marine mammals                                    posted at http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/                                   include humpback whale (Megaptera
                                                    for subsistence use at locations farther                                 permits/incidental/construction.htm                                      navaeangliae), killer whale (Orcinus
                                                    away. No disturbance or displacement                                     once it is finalized. NMFS is currently                                  orca), Steller sea lion (Eumatopius
                                                    of sea lions or harbor seals from                                        conducting an analysis, pursuant to                                      jubatus), harbor porpoise (Phocoena
                                                                                                                             NEPA, to determine whether or not this
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    traditional hunting areas by activities                                                                                                           phocoena), Dall’s porpoise
                                                    associated with the SOT project is                                       proposed activity may have a significant                                 (Phocoenoides dalli), and harbor seal
                                                                                                                             effect on the human environment. This                                    (Phoca vitulina richardii).
                                                    expected. No changes to availability of                                                                                                             (c) The taking, by Level B harassment
                                                    subsistence resources will result from                                   analysis will be completed prior to the
                                                                                                                             issuance or denial of this proposed IHA.                                 only, is limited to the species listed in
                                                    SOT project activities.                                                                                                                           condition 3(b). See Table 1 for numbers
                                                                                                                                                                                                      of take authorized.




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                                                    26656                                       Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                                                                                              TABLE 1—AUTHORIZED TAKE NUMBERS
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Proposed authorized takes
                                                                                                                                                                                                       Number of
                                                                                                       Species                                                              N (animals)              days of activity            Level A         Level B

                                                    Harbor Seal ......................................................................................................                        44                         74                0          2,272
                                                    Steller sea lion .................................................................................................                        32                         74                0          1,184
                                                    Humpback whale .............................................................................................                               2                         42                0             84
                                                    Killer whale ......................................................................................................                       15                          4                0             60
                                                    Harbor porpoise ...............................................................................................                            2                         84                0            168
                                                    Dall’s porpoise .................................................................................................                          3                         15                0             45

                                                          Total exposures ........................................................................................        ........................   ........................              0          3,813



                                                      (d) The taking by injury (Level A                                       completed without cessation, unless the                                    the necessary contractual requirements
                                                    harassment), serious injury, or death of                                  animal approaches the Level A                                              to ensure that such devices are capable
                                                    any of the species listed in condition                                    shutdown zone. Pile installation will be                                   of achieving optimal performance, and
                                                    3(b), or any taking of any other species                                  halted immediately before the animal                                       that deployment of the device is
                                                    of marine mammal is prohibited and                                        enters the Level A zone.                                                   implemented properly such that no
                                                    may result in the modification,                                             (e) Use of Ramp Up/Soft Start.                                           reduction in performance may be
                                                    suspension, or revocation of this IHA.                                      (i) The project will utilize soft start                                  attributable to faulty deployment.
                                                      (e) The MOS shall conduct briefings                                     techniques for all vibratory and impact                                       (g) Contaminant exposure mitigation
                                                    between construction supervisors and                                      pile driving. We require the MOS to                                        measures—A silt curtain and a
                                                    crews, marine mammal monitoring                                           initiate sound from vibratory hammers                                      contamination sequence will be used
                                                    team, and staff prior to the start of all                                 for fifteen seconds at reduced energy                                      during all dredging activities.
                                                    in-water pile driving, and when new                                       followed by a 1-minute waiting period,                                        (i) The silt curtain will be constructed
                                                    personnel join the work, in order to                                      with the procedure repeated two                                            of flexible, reinforced, thermoplastic
                                                    explain responsibilities, communication                                   additional times. For impact driving, we                                   material with flotation material in the
                                                    procedures, marine mammal monitoring                                      require an initial set of three strikes                                    upper hem and ballast material in the
                                                    protocol, and operational procedures.                                     from the impact hammer at reduced                                          lower hem. The curtain will be placed
                                                      4. Mitigation Measures                                                  energy, followed by a 1-minute waiting                                     in the water surrounding the dredging
                                                      The holder of this Authorization is                                     period, then two subsequent three strike                                   operation. The specifications will
                                                    required to implement the following                                       sets.                                                                      require that the Contractor maintain the
                                                    mitigation measures:                                                        (ii) Soft start will be required at the                                  silt curtain(s) around either the point of
                                                      (a) Time Restriction: For all in-water                                  beginning of each day’s pile driving                                       dredging or the dredging area at the
                                                    pile driving activities, the MOS shall                                    work and at any time following a                                           contractor’s discretion. The
                                                    operate only during daylight hours                                        cessation of pile driving of 30 minutes                                    effectiveness of the silt curtain will be
                                                    when visual monitoring of marine                                          or longer.                                                                 monitored during construction.
                                                    mammals can be conducted. All in-                                           (iii) If a marine mammal is present                                         (ii) The contractor will prioritize the
                                                    water pile extraction and installation                                    within the shutdown zone, ramping up                                       removal of the most impacted areas (i.e.,
                                                    shall be completed by March 31, 2017.                                     will be delayed until the animal(s)                                        the area with the highest observed
                                                      (b) Establishment of Level B                                            leaves the Level A harassment zone.                                        concentrations of contaminants of
                                                    Harassment (ZOI)                                                          Activity will begin only after the MMO                                     concern) before the surrounding areas.
                                                      (i) For vibratory driving, the Level B                                  has determined, through sighting, that                                        (h) Standard mitigation measures.
                                                    harassment area is contained within                                       the animal(s) has moved outside the                                           (i) Conduct briefings between
                                                    Taiya Inlet, approximately 17 km from                                     Level A harassment zone or if 15                                           construction supervisors and crews,
                                                    the action area. This distance will serve                                 minutes have passed without re-sighting                                    marine mammal monitoring team, and
                                                    as a shutdown zone for all other marine                                   of the individual.                                                         MOS staff prior to the start of all pile
                                                    mammals not listed in 3(b). During                                          (iv) If a marine mammal is present in                                    driving and extraction activity, and
                                                    impact driving, the Level B harassment                                    the Level B harassment zone, ramping                                       when new personnel join the work, in
                                                    zone shall extend to a minimum of                                         up will begin and a Level B take will be                                   order to explain responsibilities,
                                                    1,585 m for animals listed in 3(b). This                                  documented. Ramping up will occur                                          communication procedures, marine
                                                    1,585-meter distance will serve as a                                      when these species are in the Level B                                      mammal monitoring protocol, and
                                                    shutdown zone for all other marine                                        harassment zone whether they entered                                       operational procedures.
                                                    mammals not listed in 3(b).                                               the Level B zone from the Level A zone,                                       (ii) For in-water heavy machinery
                                                      (c) Establishment of shutdown zone.                                     or from outside the project area.                                          work other than pile driving (e.g.,
                                                      (i) A 16-meter shutdown zone will be                                      (v) If any marine mammal other than                                      standard barges, tug boats, barge-
                                                    in effect for Steller sea lions and harbor                                those listed in this IHA is present in the                                 mounted excavators, or clamshell
                                                    seals. The shutdown zone for Level A                                      Level B harassment zone, ramping up                                        equipment used to place or remove
                                                    injury to cetaceans would be 74 meters.                                   will be delayed until the animal(s)
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                                                                                                                                                                                                         material), if a marine mammal comes
                                                      (d) The Level A and Level B                                             leaves the zone. Ramping up will begin                                     within 10 meters, operations shall cease
                                                    harassment zones will be monitored                                        only after the MMO has determined,                                         and vessels shall reduce speed to the
                                                    throughout the time required to install                                   through sighting, that the animal(s) has                                   minimum level required to maintain
                                                    or extract a pile. If a marine mammal is                                  moved outside the harassment zone.                                         steerage and safe working conditions.
                                                    observed entering the Level B                                               (f) Sound attenuation devices—                                              (i) The MOS shall establish
                                                    harassment zone, a Level B exposure                                       Approved sound attenuation devices                                         monitoring locations as described
                                                    will be recorded and behaviors                                            shall be used during impact pile driving                                   below.
                                                    documented. That pile segment will be                                     operations. The MOS shall implement                                           5. Monitoring and Reporting


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                                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices                                              26657

                                                      The holder of this Authorization is                   implementation of shutdowns,                          circumstances of the prohibited take.
                                                    required to report all monitoring                       including the distance of animals to the              NMFS would work with the MOS to
                                                    conducted under the IHA within 90                       pile and description of specific actions              determine what is necessary to
                                                    calendar days of the completion of the                  that ensued and resulting behavior of                 minimize the likelihood of further
                                                    marine mammal monitoring                                the animal, if any. In addition, the MOS              prohibited take and ensure MMPA
                                                      (a) Visual Marine Mammal                              will attempt to distinguish between the               compliance. The MOS would not be
                                                    Monitoring and Observation                              number of individual animals taken and                able to resume their activities until
                                                      (i) At least one individual meeting the               the number of incidents of take. At a                 notified by NMFS via letter, email, or
                                                    minimum qualifications identified in                    minimum, the following information be                 telephone.
                                                    Appendix A of the application by the                    collected on the sighting forms:
                                                    MOS will monitor the shutdown and                                                                                (iii) In the event that the MOS
                                                                                                               1. Date and time that monitored
                                                    Level B harassment zones during impact                                                                        discovers an injured or dead marine
                                                                                                            activity begins or ends;
                                                    and vibratory pile driving.                                2. Construction activities occurring               mammal, and the lead MMO determines
                                                      (ii) During pile driving and extraction,              during each observation period;                       that the cause of the injury or death is
                                                    the shutdown zone, as described in 4(b),                   3. Weather parameters (e.g., percent               unknown and the death is relatively
                                                    will be monitored and maintained. Pile                  cover, visibility);                                   recent (i.e., in less than a moderate state
                                                    installation or extraction will not                        4. Water conditions (e.g., sea state,              of decomposition as described in the
                                                    commence or will be suspended                           tide state);                                          next paragraph), the MOS would
                                                    temporarily if any marine mammals are                      5. Species, numbers, and, if possible,             immediately report the incident to the
                                                    observed within or approaching the area                 sex and age class of marine mammals;                  Chief of the Permits and Conservation
                                                    of potential disturbance.                                  6. Description of any observable                   Division, Office of Protected Resources,
                                                      (iii) The area within the Level B                     marine mammal behavior patterns,                      NMFS, and the Alaska Stranding
                                                    harassment threshold for pile driving                   including bearing and direction of travel             Hotline and/or by email to the Alaska
                                                    and extraction will be monitored by                     and distance from pile driving activity;              Regional Stranding Coordinators. The
                                                    observers stationed to provide adequate                    7. Distance from pile driving activities           report would include the same
                                                    view of the harassment zone. Marine                     to marine mammals and distance from                   information identified in the paragraph
                                                    mammal presence within this Level B                     the marine mammals to the observation                 above. Activities would be able to
                                                    harassment zone, if any, will be                        point;                                                continue while NMFS reviews the
                                                    monitored. Pile driving activity will not                  8. Locations of all marine mammal                  circumstances of the incident. NMFS
                                                    be stopped if marine mammals are                        observations; and                                     would work with the MOS to determine
                                                    found to be present. Any marine                            9. Other human activity in the area.               whether modifications in the activities
                                                    mammal documented within the Level                         (c) Reporting Measures                             are appropriate.
                                                    B harassment zone during impact                            (i) In the unanticipated event that the
                                                                                                            specified activity clearly causes the take               (iv) In the event that the MOS
                                                    driving would constitute a Level B take
                                                                                                            of a marine mammal in a manner                        discovers an injured or dead marine
                                                    (harassment), and will be recorded and
                                                    reported as such.                                       prohibited by the IHA, such as an injury              mammal, and the lead MMO determines
                                                      (iv) The individuals will scan the                    (Level A harassment), serious injury or               that the injury or death is not associated
                                                    waters within each monitoring zone                      mortality (e.g., ship-strike, gear                    with or related to the activities
                                                    activity using binoculars, spotting                     interaction, and/or entanglement), the                authorized in the IHA (e.g., previously
                                                    scopes, and visual observation.                         MOS would immediately cease the                       wounded animal, carcass with moderate
                                                      (v) If waters exceed a sea-state, or                  specified activities and immediately                  to advanced decomposition, or
                                                    poor environmental conditions restricts                 report the incident to the Chief of the               scavenger damage), the MOS would
                                                    the observers’ ability to make                          Permits and Conservation Division,                    report the incident to the Chief of the
                                                    observations (e.g. excessive wind or                    Office of Protected Resources, NMFS,                  Permits and Conservation Division,
                                                    fog), impact pile installation will cease               and the Alaska Regional Stranding                     Office of Protected Resources, NMFS,
                                                    until conditions allow the resumption of                Coordinators. The report would include                and the NMFS Alaska Stranding Hotline
                                                    monitoring.                                             the following information:                            and/or by email to the Alaska Regional
                                                      (vi) The waters will be scanned 30                       1. Time, date, and location (latitude/             Stranding Coordinator, within 24 hours
                                                    minutes prior to commencing pile                        longitude) of the incident;                           of the discovery. The DOT&PF would
                                                    driving or removal at the beginning of                     2. Name and type of vessel involved;               provide photographs or video footage (if
                                                    each day, and prior to commencing pile                     3. Vessel’s speed during and leading               available) or other documentation of the
                                                    driving or removal after any stoppage of                up to the incident;                                   stranded animal sighting to NMFS and
                                                    30 minutes or greater. If marine                           4. Description of the incident;                    the Marine Mammal Stranding Network.
                                                    mammals enter or are observed within                       5. Status of all sound source use in                  6. MOS is required to comply with the
                                                    the designated marine mammal                            the 24 hours preceding the incident;                  Reasonable and Prudent Measures and
                                                    shutdown zone during or 30 minutes                         6. Water depth;                                    Terms and Conditions of the ITS
                                                    prior to impact pile driving, the                          7. Environmental conditions (e.g.,                 corresponding to NMFS’ Biological
                                                    monitors will notify the on-site                        wind speed and direction, Beaufort sea                Opinion issued to both U.S. Army Corps
                                                    construction manager to not begin until                 state, cloud cover, and visibility);                  of Engineers and NMFS’ Office of
                                                    the animal has moved outside the                           8. Description of all marine mammal
                                                                                                                                                                  Protected Resources.
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    designated radius.                                      observations in the 24 hours preceding
                                                      (vii) The waters will continue to be                  the incident;                                            7. This Authorization may be
                                                    scanned for at least 30 minutes after pile                 9. Species identification or                       modified, suspended or withdrawn if
                                                    driving has completed each day,                         description of the animal(s) involved;                the holder fails to abide by the
                                                      (b) Data Collection                                      10. Fate of the animal(s); and                     conditions prescribed herein, or if
                                                      (i) Observers are required to use                        11. Photographs or video footage of                NMFS determines the authorized taking
                                                    approved data forms. Among other                        the animal(s) (if equipment is available).            is having more than a negligible impact
                                                    pieces of information, the MOS will                        (ii) Activities would not resume until             on the species or stock of affected
                                                    record detailed information about any                   NMFS is able to review the                            marine mammals.


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                                                    26658                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2016 / Notices

                                                    Request for Public Comments                             Initiative Project. Please include with                 Dated: April 22, 2016.
                                                                                                            your comments any supporting data or                  Perry F. Gayaldo,
                                                      NMFS requests comment on our                          literature citations to help inform our               Deputy Director, Office of Protected
                                                    analysis, the draft authorization, and                  final decision on MOS’s request for an                Resources, National Marine Fisheries Service.
                                                    any other aspect of the Notice of                       MMPA authorization.                                   [FR Doc. 2016–10266 Filed 5–2–16; 8:45 am]
                                                    Proposed IHA for the Skagway Gateway
                                                                                                                                                                  BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Document Created: 2016-05-03 00:31:01
Document Modified: 2016-05-03 00:31:01
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionNotice; proposed incidental harassment authorization; request for comments.
DatesComments and information must be received no later than June 2, 2016.
ContactLaura McCue, Office of Protected Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401.
FR Citation81 FR 26629 
RIN Number0648-XE44

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