Federal Register - August 5, 2021
Version en texte Qu'est-ce que c'est?Dateas est un site Web indépendant, non affilié à un organisme gouvernemental. La source des documents PDF que nous publions est l'agence officielle indiquée dans chacun d'eux. Les versions en texte sont des transcriptions non officielles que nous faisons pour fournir de meilleurs outils d'accès et de recherche d'informations, mais peuvent contenir des erreurs ou peuvent ne pas être complètes.
Source: Federal Register
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 148 / Thursday, August 5, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
43025
TABLE 7PROBABILITY THAT A DISCRETE OR REPEATED EXPOSURE ELICITED A RESPONSE BY DENNING POLAR BEARS
THAT WOULD RESULT IN LEVEL B HARASSMENT, LEVEL A HARASSMENT INCLUDING SERIOUS AND NON-SERIOUS INJURY, OR LETHAL TAKE
Level B harassment was applicable to both adults and cubs, if present; Level A harassment and lethal take were applicable to cubs only. Probabilities were calculated from the analysis of 57 case studies of polar bear responses to human activity. Cells with NAs indicate these types of take were not possible during the given denning period.
Exposure type
Period
Discrete
Den Establishment
Early Denning
Late Denning
Post-emergence
Den Establishment
Early Denning
Late Denning
Post-emergence
Repeated
None
Case Study Analysis Definitions Below, we provide definitions for terms used in this analysis, a general overview of denning chronology and periods details are provided in the Potential Effects to Pacific Walrus, Polar Bears and Prey Species: Effects on denning bears, and the rules established for using the case studies to inform the model.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Exposure and Response Definitions Exposure: Any human activity within 1.6 km 1 mi of a polar bear den site.
In the case of aircraft, an overflight within 457 m 0.3 mi above ground level.
Discrete exposure: An exposure that occurs only once and of short duration <30 minutes. It can also be a shortduration exposure that happens repeatedly but that is separated by sufficient time that exposures can be treated as independent e.g., aerial pipeline surveys that occur weekly.
Repeated exposure: An exposure that occurs more than once within a time period where exposures cannot be considered independent or an exposure that occurs due to continuous activity during a period of time e.g., traffic along a road, or daily visits to a well pad.
Response probability: The probability that an exposure resulted in a response by denning polar bears.
We categorized each exposure into categories based on polar bear response:
No response: No observed or presumed behavioral or physiological response to an exposure.
Likely physiological response: An alteration in the normal physiological function of a polar bear e.g., elevated heart rate or stress hormone levels that is typically unobservable but is likely to occur in response to an exposure.
Behavioral response: A change in behavior in response to an exposure.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:26 Aug 04, 2021
Jkt 253001
Level B
0.400
1.000
0.091
0.000
1.000
0.800
0.708
0.000
0.600
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.267
Behavioral responses can range from biologically insignificant e.g., a resting bear raising its head in response to a vehicle driving along a road to substantial e.g., cub abandonment and concomitant levels of take vary accordingly.
Timing Definitions Entrance date: The date a female first enters a maternal den after excavation is complete.
Emergence date: The date a maternal den is first opened and a bear is exposed directly to external conditions.
Although a bear may exit the den completely at emergence, we considered even partial-body exits e.g., only a bears head protruding above the surface of the snow to represent emergence in order to maintain consistency with dates derived from temperature sensors on collared bears e.g., Rode et al.
2018b. For dens located near regularly occurring human activity, we considered the first day a bear was observed near a den to be the emergence date unless other data were available to inform emergence dates e.g., GPS collar data.
Departure date: The date when bears leave the den site to return to the sea ice. If a bear leaves the den site after a disturbance but later returns, we considered the initial movement to be the departure date.
Definition of Various Denning Periods Den establishment period: Period of time between the start of maternal den excavation and the birth of cubs. Unless evidence indicates otherwise, all dens that are excavated by adult females in the fall or winter are presumed to be maternal dens. In the absence of other information, this period is defined as denning activity prior to December 1
i.e., estimated earliest date cubs are likely present in dens Derocher et al.
1992, Van de Velde et al. 2003.
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Non-serious Level A
NA
NA
NA
0.750
NA
NA
NA
0.733
Serious Level A
NA
NA
0.909
NA
NA
NA
0.292
NA
Lethal NA
0.000
0.000
0.250
NA
0.200
0.000
0.000
Early denning period: Period of time from the birth of cubs until they reach 60 days of age and are capable of surviving outside the den. In the absence of other information, this period is defined as any denning activity occurring between December 1
and February 13 i.e., 60 days after 15
December, the estimated average date of cub birth; Van de Velde et al. 2003, Messier et al. 1994.
Late denning period: Period of time between when cubs reach 60 days of age and den emergence. In the absence of other information, this period is defined as any denning activity occurring between 14 February and den emergence.
Post-emergence period: Period of time between den emergence and den site departure. We considered a normal duration at the den site between emergence and departure to be greater than or equal to 8 days and classified departures that occurred post emergence early if they occurred less than 8 days after emergence.
Descriptions of Potential Outcomes Cub abandonment: Occurs when a female leaves all or part of her litter, either in the den or on the surface, at any stage of the denning process. We classified events where a female left her cubs but later returned or was returned by humans as cub abandonment.
Early emergence: Den emergence that occurs as the result of an exposure see Rules below.
Early departure: Departure from the den site post-emergence that occurs as the result of an exposure see Rules below.
Predictive Model Rules for Determining Den Outcomes and Assigning Take We considered any exposure in a 24-hour period that did not result in a Level A harassment or lethal take to potentially be a Level B harassment take
E:FRFM05AUR2.SGM
05AUR2