CA-2002-019

United States Department of the Interior
BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
California State Office
2800 Cottage Way, Suite W1834
Sacramento, California 95825
www.ca.blm.gov
December 21, 2001
In Reply Refer To:
6840(P)
CA-930
EMS TRANSMISSION: 12/21/01
Instruction Memorandum No. CA-2002- 019
Expires: 9/30/2002
To:
AFOs
From:
State Director
Subject:
Washington Office Call for Fish and Wildlife Data
DD: 01/22/2002
The attached WashingtonOfficeInstructionMemorandum(IM #2002-035) requests data concerning Fish,
Wildlife, and Special Status Species, as well as Challenge Cost Share accomplishments. This call for data
was previously transmitted as a Washington Directive to all BLM field offices on November 20, 2001.
WO-230 wants a consolidated response from each State Office by January 25, 2002.
Please note that this data call differs from previous WO-230 fish and wildlife data calls in two important
respects: (1) It has been streamlined withrespect to FY 2001 accomplishments and FY 2003 needs such
that only truly exemplary accomplishments and needs are solicited for this exercise, and (2) All States are
required to submit a report on completed Challenge Cost Share projects that were funded in FY 2001.
The requested recovery expenditure information(Table C) is similar to what has been previously requested
and will be used for the Threatened and Endangered Species Expenditure Report to Congress, which is
required pursuant to Section 18 of the Endangered Species Act.
While you are welcome to submit as many needs and accomplishments as you want to highlight (and those
narratives maybe used by CA-930 in future budget exercises), for purposes of this data callone exemplary
accomplishment and one exemplary need from each Field Office should suffice. Each State is limited to
submitting two narratives and five bullet items for accomplishments and two narratives and five bullet items
for needs, for a total of four narratives by program.
Because the informationrequested in Table D (Challenge Cost Share) will be reported through the Annual
Work Plan (AWP) process, and the FY 2002 AWP exercise has a later deadline, we have received
approval fromWO-230 to defer the compilationof Table D until such time as Field Offices have submitted
their responses to the FY2002 AWP directive onChallenge Cost Share. Therefore, in developing your
response to Washington Office IM #2002-035, please complete Parts A through C by the
requested deadline (1/22/02) and await furtherinstructions before attempting to respond to Part
D. To facilitate the compilation of field offices responses, please have the appropriate staff in your office
complete the tables for Parts A through C as best they can in the allowable time frame and have them
forward their responses electronically to Ed Lorentzen via Lotus Notes.
Questions regarding this data call may be directed to Ed Lorentzen at 916-978-4646.
Signed by:
J.Anthony Danna
Acting State Director
Authenticated by:
Richard A. Erickson
Records Management
Attachment
1 - W.O. Instruction Memorandum No. 2002-035 (with referenced attachments) (23 pp.)
Distribution
WO-230 (Attn: Eric Lawton)
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20240
November 9, 2001
In Reply Refer To:
6500 (230)P
EMS TRANSMISSION {11/23/2001}
Instruction Memorandum No. 2002-035
Expires: 09/30/2003
To:
WO’s and AFO’s,
From:
Assistant Director, Renewable Resources and Planning
Subject: Call for Fish, Wildlife, Botany, and Threatened and Endangered Species Data
DD: 01/25/2002
Program Area: Fish, Wildlife, Botany, and Threatened and Endangered Species
Purpose: This Instruction Memorandum (IM) transmits the Fiscal Year (FY) 2001 Annual Request
for Fish, Wildlife, Botany, and Special Status Species Data (Attachments 1-3) from the Fish, Wildlife
and Forests Group (WO-230).
Policy/Action: Information in the appropriate format, as outlined in Attachment 1, includes Fish,
Wildlife, Botany, and Threatened and Endangered Species accomplishments, needs and budget
information. Information requested here focuses on those items relating to management of programs
not tracked through the national Management Information System (MIS) system with program elements
and workload measures.
The National Training Center (NTC), the National Science and Technology Center (NSTC) and all
BLM State Offices are required to submit information. In addition, the Centers are asked to submit
descriptions of customers or audiences served or benefitted.
In order to streamline this effort from previous years, each State will be asked to submit two narratives
and five bullet items for accomplishments and two narratives and five bullet items for needs, for a total
of four narratives by program. Therefore, it is important that each State feature those accomplishments
and needs that are truly exemplary for your State. The WO-230 seeks well organized, descriptive, or
otherwise high quality narratives, and has provided specific examples of such in attachments to this IM.
As directed by the FY 2001 Annual Work Plan, all States are required to submit a report on
completed Challenge Cost Share (CCS) projects funded in FY 2001. Herein, we request that each
State provide a list and funding levels of CCS projects completed in FY 2001
(Attachment 3).
Time Frame: In order to meet our budget reporting requirements, all submissions are due to the
WO by January 25, 2002.
Budget Impact: None, however information is used to generate out-year budget needs and display
additional opportunities above base program levels.
Background: The data requested here will be used to supply information needed for the Threatened
and Endangered Species Expenditure Report to Congress, the 2003 Budget Justification, BLM’s
Public Land Statistics, the BLM Annual Report, and Needs Assessments by outside groups.
Manual/Handbook Sections Affected: None.
Coordination: As in past years, please submit a single electronic document from each State that
consolidates information from your respective Field offices, utilizing the attached format. Please direct
questions and responses to Eric Lawton ([email protected]). Eric may be reached at (202) 452­
7760. A WordPerfect copy of this IM is available for downloading from the intranet at:
http://web.blm.gov/internal/wo-200/wo-230/datacall.htm
Signed by:
Henri R. Bisson
Assistant Director
Renewable Resources and Planning
Authenticated by:
Barbara J. Brown
Policy & Records Group, WO-560
Directives forwarded to State Director, CA-930, E. Lorentzen
11/23/01
3 Attachments
1 - Instructions & Information Needed for WO Reports for Fish, Wildlife, Botany, and Threatened
& Endangered Species (6 pp)
2 - Table C for Reporting Expenditures for the Conservation of Endangered,
Threatened, and Candidate Species (14 pp)
3 - Table D for Reporting Challenge Cost Share projects (1p)
Instructions and Information Needed for WO Reports for Fish, Wildlife, Botany, and Threatened and Endangered Species
State Office:
State tables from FY00 are posted on the intranet http://web.blm.gov/internal/wo-200/wo-230/datacall.htm
A. 2001 Accomplishments: ESA Compliance/Species Conservation
ESA Compliance/Species Conservation for FY01
Under
Development
Description
Completed
Number of Biological Assessments
Cost of those Biological Assessments (000's)
Conservation Plans/Strategies/Agreements and Status
Under
Development
Names of Documents for FY01
(Insert as many rows as necessary)
Completed
Being
Implemented
Total Cost of Conservation Plans/Strategies/Agreements
(000's)
Recovery Plans
Animal
Plant
Number of Recovery Plans Being Implemented in FY01
Total Cost to complete and implement Recovery Plans (000's)
Give the Number of Staff That Participated as a Recovery Team Member and Names of
Recovery Plans Developed in FY01
Names of Recovery Plans for FY01
(Insert as many rows as necessary)
Staff
Number
Attachment 1-1
Attachment 1-2
B. 2001 Accomplishments and 2003 Needs
Please provide total funding level needs and additional FTEs for your Fish, Wildlife, Botany, and
Threatened and Endangered Species programs for Fiscal Year 2003.
•
Each State Office should compile Resource Area or Field Office figures from the FY2003
Needs tables and submit one table per state.
FY2003 Program Needs
Total Funding Needs
($000's)
Additional Personnel
Needs (#FTE)
Wildlife
Fisheries
Botany
Threatened and
Endangered Species
Accomplishments and Needs Narratives
Specific examples of needs and successes help convey and quantify the Bureau’s program
accomplishments and needs. This information will be used for the Annual Fish and Wildlife
Accomplishments Report, the 2003 budget justification, other reports, briefing papers, and brochures.
Please provide narratives describing Fish, Wildlife, Botany, and Threatened and Endangered Species
Accomplishments for 2001 and Needs for Fiscal Year 2003. Each State is required to provide two
accomplishments (each in paragraph form) and then five bulleted accomplishments for each program.
Each State is also required to provide two needs narratives for each program (in paragraph form) and
then up five bulleted needs for each program. Hence, we anticipate receiving a total of four narratives
and ten bullets for each program. A sample for constructing and formatting the narratives has been
provided. Please follow the guidelines below and utilize the standardized format provided.
Guidelines
•
Include the name of the Resource Area(s) or Field Office(s) in each accomplishment and need.
•
Include possible partners such as Trout Unlimited or The Nature Conservancy.
•
Provide positive economic benefit and/or conflict resolution to community and country as a
result of management activities on BLM.
•
Narratives should be clear, concise, and informative.
Threatened and Endangered Species Management (Sample Narratives)
Attachment 1-3
2001 Accomplishments
BLM wildlife biologists continued to participate in delineation and habitat-use mapping efforts for sage
grouse in a nine State region. State wildlife agencies are leading the conservation planning efforts in
these States. In addition, biologists are working cooperatively in a seven-State area on developing
State conservation plans for the black-tailed prairie dog, a species that potentially could be listed under
the Endangered Species Act if conservation efforts fail. Efforts to inventory and identify potential
reintroduction sites for the threatened Utah prairie dog are underway in Utah.
Several habitat improvement projects designed specifically for sage grouse were completed in Utah and
Wyoming in cooperation with the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, the National Fish and Wildlife
Foundation, Mule Deer Foundation, and Shell Oil Company. BLM, in cooperation with the Deseret
Land and Livestock, cooperatively restored 320 acres of old monoculture seedings in an area that was
historically important sage grouse habitat in northeastern Utah.
•
Roswell Field Office is developing the Ft. Stanton Area of Critical Environmental Concern
Implementation Plan that addresses the endangered Kuenzler's hedgehog cactus.
•
BLM in Colorado continues to manage Black-footed ferret breeding and pre-conditioning
facility. Ferrets from this facility are being transplanted in Colorado and Utah.
•
Alturas Field Office inventoried eight allotments, totaling 116,000 acres, for sage grouse
habitat. Fifteen leks were counted numerous times during the breeding season.
•
Dillon Field Office coordinated with Beaverhead National Forests and Salmon Field Office to
facilitate potential habitat mapping and identification of Lynx Analysis Units.
•
Approximately 200,000 acres of grassland were surveyed for Mountain plover in the Socorro
Field Office.
2003 Needs
The Utah Prairie Dog Interim Conservation Strategy calls for vegetation projects to improve existing
habitat. Monitoring of past projects is also needed. Improvement of public land habitat is required for
implementation of the local Habitat Conservation Plan and in resolving conflicts on private lands. The
“take” of Utah prairie dogs on private lands is based on Utah prairie dog numbers on public lands.
Most of the vegetation projects would be completed by contractors. An additional FTE is needed to
implement BLM’s recovery responsibilities and administer the Utah prairie dog program, freeing up our
current biologist to work on other concerns. Cooperators include the Utah Division of Wildlife
Resources and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. There is also increasing concern that existing Utah
prairie dog management plans may need modification to cover multi-species concerns. ($50,000)
Continuation of the Oregon Spotted Frog study with the USGS to determine the relationship of
bullfrogs to the decline of Oregon Spotted Frog. Continue study of the Casey tract, Crescent Creek
Attachment 1-4
and possibly Sunriver populations to determine how the populations in those areas which do not have
bullfrog populations differ from the Casey tract which does have both species. Study results may help in
determining how to allocate future funds and management. (i.e., Should we focus on maintaining certain
habitats within bullfrog infested areas for spotted frogs or should we put effort into bullfrog control?)
($35,000)
•
The Surprise Field Office needs supplemental funding to promote recovery of the Warner
sucker by conducting habitat surveys in the upper Warner Basin. ($10,000)
•
All Idaho Field Offices will need additional funding to implement actions to reduce noxious
weed infestations on listed MacFarlane's four-o'clock populations. ($7,000)
•
Billings Field Office continued peregrine falcon productivity monitoring necessary under
delisting criteria. ($2,000)
•
The Las Cruces Field Office will continue implementation of planned actions in the recovery
plans for Southwestern willow flycatcher, loach minnow and spikedace. ($15,000)
•
Initiate a GIS mapping project for all listed special status plant species in the Kanab Field
Office for the field office planning and standards and guides assessments. ($10,000)
Wildlife Management (Narratives)
2001 Accomplishments
2003 Needs
Fisheries Management (Narratives)
2001 Accomplishments
2003 Needs
Botany Management (Narratives)
2001 Accomplishments
2003 Needs
Attachment 1-5
C. FY2000 T/E Species Expenditures and Special Status Species Information
Please provide Special Status Species list funding information on Threatened and Endangered
Species Expenditures for Fiscal Year 2001. Follow the guidelines below and utilize the
standardized format provided in Table C.
Guidelines for T/E Expenditures
C Only species on the list of Endangered, Threatened, and Candidate Wildlife and Plants (50 CFR
Part 17) at the end of the Fiscal Year are to be reported. Expenditures made prior to the actual
listing date of a species, but still within the same year, may be reported (e.g., costs of public
meetings, notices, surveys, initial recovery efforts). Monies for unlisted, separate populations of
listed vertebrates cannot be allowed into the report.
C Species should be identified by the same name as found in the most current list of species. Amounts
above $2,000 need be only to nearest $500 or $1,000; smaller amounts may be to the nearest
$100.
C In passing the amendment, Congress indicated that the requirement was aimed primary at expenses
associated with the development and implementation of recovery plans for listed species. Thus, the
main focus of the report should be funding of projects that are primarily to support the conservation
of endangered or threatened species.
C Only reasonably identifiable expenditures for listed species will be totaled in this report.
Extraordinary accounting to track monies expended on individual listed species are not expected.
C All habitat acquisition costs are to be reported separately from all other identifiable
expenditures. Such acquisitions must be primarily for the purpose of conserving specific Federally
listed species. As with other projects, those portions of habitat acquisition costs that are specifically
for a listed species may be prorated out of the total acquisition costs when the other habitat is being
acquired for other purposes (e.g., 25 acres of a 250-acre purchase will be set aside).
C Salary and benefits of an employee working full-time on a single species or whose time devoted to a
particular species can be readily identified can be reported. Conversely, staff costs that are not
assigned to work on particular species are not usually reportable.
C Any State or Federal project that incurs increased costs related directly to mitigation or other
conservation efforts on behalf of Federally listed species can report that added cost.
C Examples of reportable expenditures that are directed to individual species include status surveys,
habitat management or acquisition, research, propagation (including surrogate species), recovery
plan development or implementation, and mitigation. The project must be to primarily benefit the
listed species and not other conservation goals.
C Expenditures in a single project devoted to a number of listed species should be prorated.
Attachment 1-6
C Monitoring and survey costs should be reported when: 1) The cost of the monitoring or survey was
during the period the species was under a proposed listed and the species was actually listed in the
same fiscal year that the monitoring and surveys were conducted; 2) The monitoring or survey
covered both candidates and listed species and the cost can be prorated to include only the listed
species; and 3) Monitoring or surveys costs of listed species should be included when they readily
identifiable to a single species.
D. FY2001 Challenge Cost Share
Please provide funding information on Fiscal Year 2001 Challenge Cost Share accomplishments by
completed project. Provide funding levels for each benefitting BLM subactivity and all contributed
amounts from other partners. Please utilize the standardized format provided in Table D.
Attachment 1-7
Table C. FY2001 T/E Species Expenditures and Special Status Species Information
(State lists from FY00 are posted on the intranet http://web.blm.gov/internal/wo-200/wo-230/datacall.htm
Use the following table to provide a list of special status species that appear on BLM managed land. Only provide expenditures for Federally listed,
proposed, and candidate species.
Special Status Species
Common Name
Scientific Name
Status
Federally Proposed or Designated
Critical Habitat
(if yes, give approximate BLM
acreage)
Expenditures ($000's)
Total Cost
Land
Acquisition 1./
Federally Listed
Longhorn fairy shrimp
Conservancy fairy shrimp
Vernal pool fairy shrimp
Valley elderberry longhorn beetle
Quino checkerspot butterfly
Kern primrose sphinx moth
Vernal pool tadpole shrimp
Modoc sucker
Warner sucker
Shortnose sucker
Desert pupfish
Owens pupfish
Lost River sucker
Unarmored threespine stickleback
Mohave tui chub
Owens tui chub
Lahontan cutthroat trout
Coho salmon (Central CA Coast ESU)
Coho salmon (So OR/No CA Coast
ESU)
Steelhead (Central Valley ESU)
Steelhead (Central CA Coast ESU)
Chinook salmon (Sacramento R.
winter-run ESU)
Chinook salmon (Central Valley
Branchinecta conservatio
Branchinecta conservatio
Branchinecta lynchi
Desmocerus californicus dimorphus
Euphydryas editha quino
Euproserpinus euterpe
Lepidurus packardi
Catostomus microps
Catostomus warnerensis
Chasmistes brevirostris
Cyprinodon macularius
Cyprinodon radiosus
Deltistes luxatus
Gasterosteus aculeatus williamsoni
Gila bicolor mohavensis
Gila bicolor snyderi
Oncorhynchus clarki henshawi
Oncorhynchus kisutch
Oncorhynchus kisutch
FE
FE
FT
FT
FE
FT
FE
FE
FT
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FT
FT
FT
Oncorhynchus mykiss
Oncorhynchus mykiss
Oncorhynchus tshawytscha
FT
FT
FE
Oncorhynchus tshawytscha
FT
Attachment 2-1
spring-run ESU)
Chinook salmon (California coastal
ESU)
Desert slender salamander
Arroyo toad
California red-legged frog
Blunt-nosed leopard lizard
Desert tortoise
Giant garter snake
Coachella V. fringe-toed lizard
Marbled murrelet
Aleutian Canada goose
Western snowy plover
SW willow flycatcher
California condor
Bald eagle
Brown pelican
Inyo CA (=brown) towhee
Coastal CA gnatcatcher
Yuma clapper rail
Northern spotted owl
Least Bell's vireo
Giant kangaroo rat
Fresno kangaroo rat
Tipton kangaroo rat
Stephens' kangaroo rat
Amargosa vole
Bighorn sheep (Peninsular Ranges)
Bighorn sheep (Sierra Nevada pop.)
San Joaquin kit fox
San Diego thorn-mint
Munz's onion
McDonald's rock-cress
Morro manzanita
Ione manzanita
Cushenbury milk-vetch
Braunton's milk-vetch
Oncorhynchus tshawytscha
FT
Batrachoseps aridus
Bufo microscaphus californicus
Rana aurora draytonii
Gambelia silus
Gopherus agassizii
Thamnophis gigas
Uma inornata
Brachyramphus marmoratus
marmoratus
Branta canadensis leucopareia
Charadrius alexandrinus nivosus
Empidonax traillii extimus
Gymnogyps californianus
Haliaeetus leucocephalus
Pelecanus occidentalis
Pipilo crissalis eremophilus
Polioptila californica californica
Rallus longirostris yumanensis
Strix occidentalis caurina
Vireo bellii pusillus
Dipodomys ingens
Dipodomys nitratoides exilis
Dipodomys nitratoides nitratoides
Dipodomys stephensi
Microtus californicus scirpensis
Ovis canadensis
Ovis canadensis californiana
Vulpes macrotis mutica
Acanthomintha ilicifolia
Allium munzii
Arabis mcdonaldiana
Arctostaphylos morroensis
Arctostaphylos myrtifolia
Astragalus albens
Astragalus brauntonii
FE
FE
FT
FE
FT
FT
FT
FT
FT
FT
FE
FE
FT
FE
FT
FT
FE
FT
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FT
FT
FE
FT
FT
FE
FE
Attachment 2-2
Lane Mtn. Milkvetch
Coachella Valley milkvetch
Fish Slough milkvetch
Pierson's milkvetch
Triple-ribbed milkvetch
San Jacinto Valley crownscale
Encinitis baccharis
Nevin's barberry
Thread-leaved brodiaea
Stebbins' morning-glory
San Benito evening-primrose
Fleshy owl's-clover
California jewelflower
Pine Hill ceanothus
Spring-loving centaury
Hoover's spurge
Purple amole
Howell's spineflower
Orcutt's spineflower
Monterey spineflower
Chorro Creek bog thistle
La Graciosa thistle
Springville clarkia
Slender-horned spineflower
Marcescent dudleyea
Kern mallow
Santa Ana River woolly-star
Hoover's wooly-star
Parish's daisy
Indian Knob mountain balm
Lompoc yerba santa
Ione buckwheat
Cushenbury buckwheat
Menzies' wallflower
Pine Hill flannelbush
Astragalus jaegeriannus
Astragalus lentiginosus var.
coachellaie
Astragalus lentiginous var. piscinensis
Astragalus magdalenae var. piersonii
Astragalus tricarinatus
Atriplex coronata notatior
Baccharis vanessae
Berberis nevinii
Brodiaea filifolia
Calystegia stebbinsii
Camissonia benitensis
Castilleja campestris ssp. succulenta
Caulanthus californicus
Ceanothus roderickii
Centaurium namophilum
Chamaesyce hooveri
Chlorogalum purpureum var.
purpureum
Chorizanthe howellii
Chorizanthe orcuttiana
Chorizanthe pungens var.pungens
Cirsium fontinale var. obispoense
Cirsium loncholepis
Clarkia springvillensis
Dodecahema leptoceras
Dudleya cymosa ssp. marcescens
Eremalche kernensis
Eriastrum densifolium ssp. sanctorum
Eriastrum hooveri
Erigeron parishii
Eriodictyon altissimum
Eriodictyon capitatum
Eriogonum apricum
Eriogonum ovalifolium var. vineum
Erysimum menziesii ssp. eurekense
Fremontodendron californicum ssp.
decumbens
FE
FE
FT
FT
FE
FE
FT
FE
FT
FE
FT
FT
FE
FE
FT
FT
FT
FE
FE
FT
FE
FE
FT
FE
FT
FE
FE
FT
FT
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
Attachment 2-3
Mexican flannelbush
El Dorado bedstraw
Monterey gilia
Ash Meadows gumplant
Otay tarplant
Water howellia
Contra Costa goldfields
Beach layia
San Joaquin wooly-threads
Butte County meadowfoam
Amargosa niterwort
Bakersfield cactus
California orcutt grass
San Joaquin Valley orcutt grass
Hairy orcutt grass
Slender orcuss grass
Cushenbury oxytheca
Yreka phlox
Otay mesa-mint
Hartweg's golden sunburst
San Joaquin adobe sunburst
Layne's butterweed
Keck's checker-mallow
Metcalf Canyon jewelflower
Greene's orcutt grass
Red Hills vervain
Fremontodendron mexicanum
Galium californcicum ssp. sierrae
Gilia tenuiflora ssp. arenaria
Grindelia fraxino-pratensis
Hemizonia conjugens
Howellia aquatilis
Lasthenia conjugens
Layia carnosa
Lembertia congdonii
Limnanthes floccosa californica
Nitrophila mohavensis
Opuntia treleasei
Orcuttia californica
Orcuttia inaequalis
Orcuttia pilosa
Orcuttia tenuis
Oxytheca parishii var. goodmaniana
Phlox hirsuta
Pogogyne nudiuscula
Pseudobahia bahiifolia
Pseudobahia peirsonii
Senecio layneae
Sidalcea keckii
Streptanthus albidus albidus
Tuctoria greenei
Verbena californica
FE
FE
FE
FT
FT
FT
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FT
FE
FT
FE
FE
FE
FE
FT
FT
FE
FE
FE
FT
Haliotes sorenseni
Gila bicolor vaccaceps
Oncorhynchus mykiss
Charadrium montanus
Ambrosia pumila
PE
PE
PT
PT
PE
Federally Proposed
White abalone
Cowhead Lake tui chub
Steelhead (Northern CA ESU)
Mountain plover
San Diego ambrosia
Attachment 2-4
Candidate
Black abalone
Steelhead (Klamath Mtns. ESU)
Chinook Salmon (Central V. ESU)
California tiger salamander
Coachella Valley round-tailed ground
squirrel
Red Mountain buckwheat
Red Mountain stonecrop
Parish's checkerbloom
Haliotis cracherodii
Oncorhynchus mykiss
Oncorhynchus tshawytscha
Ambystoma californiense
Spermophilus tereticadus ssp. chlorus
C
C
C
C
C
Eriogonum kelloggii
Sedum eastwoodiae
Sidalcea hickmanii ssp. parishii
C
C
C
Monadenia circumcarinata
Monadenia mormonum hirsuta
Aegialia concinna
Coelus gracilis
Trithyreus shoshonensis
Cyprinodon nevadensis amargosae
Lavinia symmetricus ssp.
Rhinichthys osculus ssp.
Batrachoseps campi
Batrachoseps stebbinsi
Ensatina eschscholtzi croceator
Rana boylei
Rana yavapaiensis
Scaphiopus couchi
Clemmys marmorata pallida
Eumeces skiltonianus interparietalis
Heloderma suspectum
Lampropeltis zonata zonata
Phrynosoma coronatum frontale
Phrynosoma mcalli
Sceloporus graciosus graciosus
Thamnophis hammondii
Uma notata notata
Uma scoparia
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BS
BLM Sensitive*
Keeled sideband snail
Hairy Sierra sideband snail
Ciervo aegialian scarab beetle
San Joaquin dune beetle
Shoshone Cave whip-scorpion
Amargosa River pupfish
Red Hills roach
Amargosa speckled dace
Inyo Mountains slender salamander
Tehachapi slender salamander
Yellow-blotched salamander
Foothill yellow-legged frog
San Sebastian leopard frog
Couch's spadefoot toad
Southwestern pond turtle
Coronado skink
Gila monster
St. Helena mountain kingsnake
California horned lizard
Flat-tailed horned lizard
Northern sagebrush lizard
Two-striped garter snake
Colorado Desert fringe-toed lizard
Mojave fringe-toed lizard
Attachment 2-5
Tricolored blackbird
Burrowing owl
Sage grouse
California spotted owl
Bendire's thrasher
Le Conte's thrasher
Gray vireo
Pallid bat
Marysville kangaroo rat
Short-nosed kangaroo rat
Spotted bat
Western mastiff-bat
California leaf-nosed bat
Pacific fisher
Small-footed Myotis
Long-eared Myotis
Fringed Myotis
Cave myotis
Yuma Myotis
Tulare grasshopper mouse
Desert bighorn sheep
San Joaquin pocket mouse
Yellow-eared pocket mouse
Townsend's western big-eared bat
pink sand-verbena
Henderson's bent grass
Jepson's onion
Spanish Needle onion
dimorphic snapdragon
Bodie Hills rock cress
Darwin rock cress
white bear poppy
Arroyo De La Cruz manzanita
Hooker's manzanita
Klamath manzanita
Monterey manzanita
Nissenan manzanita
Agelaius tricolor
Athene cunicularia
Centrocercus urophasianus
Strix occidentalis occidentalis
Toxostoma bendirei
Toxostoma lecontei
Vireo vicinior
Antrozous pallidus
Dipodomys californicus eximius
Dipodomys nitratoides brevinasus
Euderma maculatum
Eumops perotis californicus
Macrotus californicus
Martes pennanti pacifica
Myotis ciliolabrum
Myotis evotis
Myotis thysanodes
Myotis velifer
Myotis yumanensis
Onychomys torridus tularensis
Ovis canadensis nelsoni
Perognathus inornatus inornatus
Perognathus xanthonotus
Plecotus townsendii
Abronia umbellata ssp. breviflora
Agrostis hendersonii
Allium jepsonii
Allium shevockii
Antirrhinum subcordatum
Arabis bodiensis
Arabis pulchra var. munciensis
Arctomecon merriamii
Arctostaphylos cruzensis
Arctostaphylos hookeri ssp. hookeri
Arctostaphylos klamathensis
Arctostaphylos montereyensis
Arctostaphylos nissenana
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Attachment 2-6
Otay manzanita
Santa Margarita manzanita
Sandmat manzanita
sand mesa manzanita
Field milk-vetch
Ash Valley milk-vetch
Silverleaf milk-vetch
Darwin Mesa milk-vetch
Deane's milk-vetch
Jacumba milkvetch
Walker Pass milkvetch
black milk-vetch
Geyer's milkvetch
lens-pod milk-vetch
San Diego rattleweed
Tonopah milk-vetch
Pulsifer's milk-vetch
Suksdorf's milk-vetch
Jepson's milk-vetch
Shevock's milk-vetch
Ferris's milk-vetch
Tiehm's milk-vetch
Webber's milk-vetch
heart-leaved saltbush
Lost Hills saltbush
woolly balsamroot
big-scale balsamroot
scalloped moonwort
Orcutt's brodiaea
Ceanothus divergens
Arroyo de la Cruz mariposa lily
Pleasant Valley mariposa lily
Inyo mariposa
Greene's mariposa
long-haired star-tulip
Arctostaphylos otayensis
Arctostaphylos pilosula
Arctostaphylos pumila
Arctostaphylos rudis
Astragalus agrestis
Astragalus anxius
Astragalus argophyllus var.
argophyllus
Astragalus atratus var. mensanus
Astragalus deanei
Astragalus douglasii var. perstrictus
Astragalus ertterae
Astragalus funereus
Astragalus geyeri var. geyeri
Astragalus lentiformis
Astragalus oocarpus
Astragalus pseudiodanthus
Astragalus pulsiferae var. pulsiferae
Astragalus pulsiferae var. suksdorfii
Astragalus rattanii var. jepsonianus
Astragalus shevockii
Astragalus tener var. ferrisiae
Astragalus tiehmii
Astragalus webberi
Atriplex cordulata
Atriplex vallicola
Balsamorhiza hookeri var. lanata
Balsamorhiza macrolepis var.
macrolepis
Botrichium crenulatum
Brodiaea orcuttii
Calistoga ceanothus
Calochortus clavatus ssp. recurvifolius
Calochortus clavatus var. avius
Calochortus excavatus
Calochortus greenei
Calochortus longebarbatus var.
longebarbatus
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Attachment 2-7
San Luis mariposa lily
alkali mariposa lily
Shirley Meadows star-tulip
Hardham's evening-primrose
Sharsmith's harebell
Castle Crags harebell
San Luis Obispo sedge
Mendocino Coast paintbrush
Santa Barbara jewelflower
Jaeger's caulostramina
Rincon Ridge ceanothus
Monterey ceanothus
lakeside ceanothus
Calistoga ceanothus
Shasta chaenactis
flat-seeded spurge
Red Hills soaproot
dwarf soaproot
San Benito spineflower
Brewer's spineflower
straight-awned spineflower
slough thistle
Mt. Hamilton thistle
compact cobwebby thistle
Mariposa clarkia
Shasta clarkia
white-stemmed clarkia
Mosquin's clarkia
Enterprise clarkia
Beaked clarkia
Caliente clarkia
Great Basin claytonia
hispid bird's beak
Tecopa bird's beak
pallid bird's beak
Mt. Hamilton coreopsis
Calochortus obispoensis
Calochortus striatus
Calochortus westonii
Camissonia hardhamiae
Campanula sharsmithiae
Campanula shetleri
Carex obispoensis
Castilleja mendocinensis
Caulanthus amplexicaulis var. barbarae
Caulostramina jaegeri
Ceanothus confusus
Ceanothus cuneatus var. rigidus
Ceanothus cyaneus
Ceanothus divergens
Chaenactis suffrutescens
Chamaesyce platysperma
Chlorogalum grandiflorum
Chlorogalum pomeridianum var.
minus
Chorizanthe bilobo var. immemora
Chorizanthe breweri
Chorizanthe rectispina
Cirsium crassicaule
Cirsium fontinale var. campylon
Cirsium occidentale var. compactum
Clarkia biloba ssp. australis
Clarkia borealis ssp. arida
Clarkia gracilis ssp. albicaulis
Clarkia mosquinii ssp. mosquinii
Clarkia mosquinii ssp. xerophila
Clarkia rostrata
Clarkia trembloriensis ssp. calientens
Claytonia umbellata
Cordylanthus mollis ssp. hispidus
Cordylanthus tecopensis
Cordylanthus tenuis ssp. pallescens
Coreopsis hamiltonii
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Attachment 2-8
silky cryptantha
Gander's cryptantha
Schoolcraft's cryptantha
Piute cypress
Tecate cypress
Bodie Hills cusickiella
desert cymopterus
Ornate dalea
Kern County Larkspur
recurved larkspur
California ditaxis
Mt. Eddy draba
San Luis Obispo serpentine dudleya
many-stemmed duleya or hasseanthus
variegated dudleya
Howe's hedgehog cactus
Panamint daisy
Oregon fireweed
Siskiyou fireweed
Eastwood's goldenbush
Hall's daisy
Blochman's leafy daisy
Kern River daisy
forked buckwheat
Piute buckwheat
Crosby's buckwheat
Wild Rose Canyon buckwheat
Klamath Mtn. buckwheat
Cache Peak buckwheat
Panamint Mountains buckwheat
Snow Mtn. buckwheat
mouse buckwheat
prostrate buckwheat
Temblor buckwheat
Fort Tejon woolly sunflower
Barstow woolly-sunflower
Coast wallflower
Cryptantha crinita
Cryptantha ganderi
Cryptantha schoolcraftii
Cupressus arizonica ssp. nevadensis
Cupressus forbesii
Cusickiella quadricostata
Cymopterus deserticola
Dalea ornata
Delphinium purpusii
Delphinium recurvatum
Ditaxis californica
Draba carnosula
Dudleya abramsii ssp. bettinae
Dudleya multicaulis
Dudleya variegata
Echinocereus engelmannii var. howei
Enceliopsis covillei
Epilobium oreganum
Epilobium siskiyouense
Ericameria fasciculata
Erigeron aequifolius
Erigeron blochmaniae
Erigeron multiceps
Eriogonum bifurcatum
Eriogonum breedlovei var. breedlovei
Eriogonum crosbyae
Eriogonum eremicola
Eriogonum hirtellum
Eriogonum kennedyi var. pinicola
Eriogonum microthecum var.
panamintense
Eriogonum nervulosum
Eriogonum nudum var. murinum
Eriogonum prociduum
Eriogonum temblorense
Eriophyllum lanatum var. hallii
Eriophyllum mohavense
Erysimum ammophilum
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Attachment 2-9
Tuolumne fawn-lily
Red Rock poppy
diamond-petaled California poppy
Alverson's foxtail cactus
Butte County fritillary
talus fritillary
adobe lily
San Jacinto bedstraw
Modoc bedstraw
San Gabriel bedstraw
Hardham's bedstraw
Kingston bedstraw
Scott Mtn. bedstraw
Warner Mtns. bedstraw
Mendocino gentian
little San Bernardino Mt. gilia
Mission Canyon bluecup
pungent glossopetalon
Palmer's grapplinghook
Orcutt's Hazardia
Diablo rock-rose
Tecate tarplant
Congdon's tarplant
glandular western flax
Brewer's dwarf flax
Drymaria-like western flax
Napa western flax
Tehama County western flax
Shevock's hairy golden-aster
Duran's alumroot
Henderson's horkelia
Parry's horkelia
Inyo hulsea
Sierra Valley ivesia
Jaeger's ivesia
alkali ivesia
Erythronium tuolumnense
Eschscholzia minutiflora ssp.
twisselmannii
Eschscholzia rhombipetala
Escobaria vivipara var. alversonii
Fritillaria eastwoodiae
Fritillaria falcata
Fritillaria pluriflora
Galium californicum ssp. primum
Galium glabrescens ssp. modocense
Galium grande
Galium hardhamiae
Galium hilendiae ssp. kingstonense
Galium serpenticum ssp. scotticum
Galium serpenticum ssp. warnerense
Gentiana setigera
Gilia maculata
Githopsis diffusa ssp. filicaulis
Glossopetalon pungens
Harpagonella palmeri
Hazardia orcuttii
Helianthella castanea
Hemizonia floribunda
Hemizonia parryi ssp. congdonii
Hesperolinon adenophyllum
Hesperolinon breweri
Hesperolinon drymarioides
Hesperolinon serpentinum
Hesperolinon tehamense
Heterotheca villosa var. shevockii
Heuchera duranii
Horkelia hendersonii
Horkelia parryi
Hulsea vestita ssp. inyoensis
Ivesia aperta var. aperta
Ivesia jaegeri
Ivesia kingii var. kingii
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Attachment 2-10
Castle Crags ivesia
Ash Creek ivesia
Kingston Mtns. ivesia
Pickering's ivesia
grimy ivesia
Plumas ivesia
Webber's ivesia
Red Bluff dwarf rush
Coulter's goldfields
rayless tidytips
pale-yellow layia
Jones's layia
Comanche Point layia threads
Munz's tidy-tips
Colusa layia
legenere
Gander's pitcher-sage
Borrego Valley pepper-grass
Panoch pepper-grass
Jared's pepper-grass
Cantelow's lewisia
Heckner's lewisia
Stebbins' lewisia
Bellinger's meadowfoam
Mt. Tedoc linanthus
Orcutt's linanthus
sagebrush loeflingia
Congdon's lomatium
Owens Peak lomatium
red-flowered lotus
Anthony Peak lupine
Quincy lupine
Mono Lake lupine
Mountain Springs bush lupine
San Luis lupine
Panamint Mountains lupine
shaggyhair lupine
Ivesia longibracteata
Ivesia paniculata
Ivesia patellifera
Ivesia pickeringii
Ivesia rhypara var. rhypara
Ivesia sericoleuca
Ivesia webberi
Juncus leiospermus var. leiospermus
Lasthenia glabrata ssp. coulteri
Layia discoidea
Layia heterotricha
Layia jonesii
Layia leucopappa
Layia munzii
Layia septentrionalis
Legenere limosa
Lepechinia ganderi
Lepidium flavum var. felipense
Lepidium jaredii ssp. album
Lepidium jaredii ssp. jaredii
Lewisia cantelovii
Lewisia cotyledon var. heckneri
Lewisia stebbinsii
Limnanthes floccosa ssp. bellingeriana
Linanthus nuttallii ssp. howellii
Linanthus orcuttii
Loeflingia squarrosa var. artemisiarum
Lomatium congdonii
Lomatium shevockii
Lotus rubriflorus
Lupinus antoninus
Lupinus dalesiae
Lupinus duranii
Lupinus excubitus var. medius
Lupinus ludovicianus
Lupinus magnificus var. magnificus
Lupinus spectabilis
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Attachment 2-11
Niles's madia
Hall's madia
showy madia
Stebbins's madia
Davidson's bush mallow
Carmel Valley bush mallow
Carmel Valley malacothrix
Slender-stemmed monkeyflower
Mojave monkeyflower
Kaweah monkeyflower
calico monkeyflower
pygmy monkeyflower
Shevock's monkeyflower
Lassics sandwort
Scott Mtn. sandwort
Sweet-smelling monardella
crisp monardella
veiny monardella
San Luis Obispo monardella
flax-like monardella
Robison monardella
San Diego goldenstar
Baker's navarretia
Piute Mountains navarretia
Shasta snow-wreath
short-joint beavertail
Munz cholla
purple mountain-parsley
Shasta orthocarpus
Nevada oryctes
Little ricegrass
giant Spanish needle
Ahart's paronychia
Dwarf lousewort
white-margined beardtongue
thread-leaved beardtongue
Madia doris-nilesiae
Madia hallii
Madia radiata
Madia stebbinsii
Malacothamnus davidsonii
Malacothamnus palmeri var.
involucratus
Malacothrix saxatilis var. arachnoidea
Mimulus filicaulis
Mimulus mohavensis
Mimulus norrisii
Mimulus pictus
Mimulus pygmaeus
Mimulus shevockii
Minuartia decumbens
Minuartia stolonifera
Monardella beneolens
Monardella crispa
Monardella douglasii var. venosa
Monardella frutescens
Monardella linoides ssp. oblonga
Monardella robisonii
Muilla clevelandii
Navarretia leucocephala ssp. bakeri
Navarretia setiloba
Neviusia cliftonii
Opuntia basilaris var. brachyclada
Opuntia munzii
Oreonana purpurascens
Orthocarpus pachystachyus
Oryctes nevadensis
Oryzopsis exigua
Palafoxia arida var. gigantea
Paronychia ahartii
Pedicularis centranthera
Penstemon albomarginatus
Penstemon filiformis
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Attachment 2-12
Death Valley beardtongue
closed-throated beardtongue
Stephen's beardtongue
Tracy's beardtongue
slender pentachaeta
Inyo laphamia
Hanaupah laphamia
Death Valley sandpaper plant
Cooke's phacelia
Scott Mountain phacelia
Scott Valley phacelia
Siskiyou phacelia
Mono County phacelia
Death Valley round-leaved phacelia
Nash's phacelia
Nine Mile Canyon phacelia
Parish's phacelia
Mount Diablo phacelia
Stebbins' phacelia
Profuse-flowered pogogyne
Mason's sky pilot
Modoc County knotweed
Black Rock potentilla
Howell's alkali grass
Parish's alkali grass
showy raillardella
Muir's raillardella
California beaked-rush
Moreno currant, San Diego currant
Sequoia gooseberry
Columbia yellow cress
Hall's rupertia
Sanford's arrowhead
Tracy's sanicle
black-flowered figwort
Holmgren's skullcap
Penstemon fruticiformis var. amargosae
Penstemon personatus
Penstemon stephensii
Penstemon tracyi
Pentachaeta exilis ssp. aeolica
Perityle inyoensis
Perityle villosa
Petalonyx thurberi ssp. gilmanii
Phacelia cookei
Phacelia dalesiana
Phacelia greenei
Phacelia leonis
Phacelia monoensis
Phacelia mustelina
Phacelia nashiana
Phacelia novenmillensis
Phacelia parishii
Phacelia phacelioides
Phacelia stebbinsii
Pogogyne floribunda
Polemonium chartaceum
Polygonum polygaloides ssp.
esotericum
Potentilla basaltica
Puccinellia howelli
Puccinellia parishii
Raillardella pringlei
Raillardiopsis muirii
Rhynchospora californica
Ribes canthariforme
Ribes tularense
Rorippa columbiae
Rupertia hallii
Sagittaria sanfordii
Sanicula tracyi
Scrophularia atrata
Scutellaria holmgreniorum
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Attachment 2-13
Feather River stonecrop
Applegate stonecrop
Canyon Creek stonecrop
cut-leaved ragwort
Butte County checker-mallow
English Peak greenbriar
Rusby's desert-mallow
Woolly stenotus
Socrates Mine jewel-flower
Freed's jewelflower
Mount Hamilton jewel-flower
Piute Mountains jewel-flower
Hoffmann's jewel-flower
Three Peaks jewelflower
Dorr's Cabin jewel-flower
Kruckeberg's jewelflower
Morrison's jewel-flower
Masonic Mountain jewelflower
oil neststraw
Mason neststraw
Parry's tetracoccus
DeDecker's clover
El Dorado mule ears
Orcutt's woody aster
FE-Federally endangered
Sedum albomarginatum
Sedum oblanceolatum
Sedum paradisum
Senecio eurycephalus var. lewisrosei
Sidalcea robusta
Smilax jamesii
Sphaeralcea rusbyi var. eremicola
Stenotus lanuginosus
Streptanthus brachiatus ssp. brachiatus
Streptanthus brachiatus ssp. hoffmanii
Streptanthus callistus
Streptanthus cordatus var. piutensis
Streptanthus glandulosus var.
hoffmannii
Streptanthus morrisonii ssp. elatus
Streptanthus morrisonii ssp. hirtiflorus
Streptanthus morrisonii ssp.
kruckebergii
Streptanthus morrisonii ssp. morrisonii
Streptanthus oliganthus
Stylocline citroleum
Stylocline masonii
Tetracoccus dioicus
Trifolium macilentum var. dedeckerae
Wyethia reticulata
Xylorhiza orcuttii
FT-Federally threatened
PE-Proposed endangered
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PT-Proposed threatened
C-Candidate
BS-BLM sensitive
CH-Critical Habitat
PCH-Proposed Critical Habitat
* List species designated pursuant to IM-97-118
1./ As part of the total cost
Attachment 2-14
Table D. FY2001 Challenge Cost Share
Please provide funding information on Fiscal Year 2001 Challenge Cost Share accomplishments by completed project. Provide funding levels for
each benefitting BLM subactivity and all contributed amounts from other partners.
FY2001 Challenge Cost Share (000's)
BLM Contribution by Subactivity
Office
Descriptive Title of Project
1020
1040
1050
1110
1120
1150
1220
Partner(s)
Contribution
Totals
Attachment 3
Attachment 3