Difference between revisions of "Species of Management Concern"

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*Speckled Dace
 
*Speckled Dace
  
=='''Reptiles'''==
+
=='''Reptiles and Amphibians'''==
 
*[http://gcdamp.com/index.php?title=Zebra-Tailed_Lizard-ES Zebra-Tailed Lizard]
 
*[http://gcdamp.com/index.php?title=Zebra-Tailed_Lizard-ES Zebra-Tailed Lizard]
 
*Relict leopard frog
 
*Relict leopard frog
 
*Gila monster
 
*Gila monster
 +
*[[GCDAMP-Colorado River Toad| Colorado River toad (Sonoran Desert toad) ]]
 
*Rocky Mountain toad
 
*Rocky Mountain toad
 
*Western threadsnake
 
*Western threadsnake

Revision as of 11:51, 9 July 2018


Kanab Ambersnail- EP.jpg

Taxa of Management Concern (TMC)

April 2009 motion:
“In recognition of GCDAMP [Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program] goals toward management of the Colorado River through an ecosystem approach, AMWG directs the TWG [Technical Work Group] to establish the Species of Concern Ad Hoc Committee [SMCAHC, (the Committee)] and requests the participation of GCMRC [U.S. Geological Survey Glen Canyon Monitoring and Research Center] in that ad hoc committee, to produce a draft report to be presented to AMWG on or before by May 1, 2011, that contains the following with regard to species of management concern in the CRE: A review of information about an assessment of the status of habitat needs and availability, and ecosystem roles of the species.” [1]

Endangered or Previously Listed TMC: A total of 18 taxa (21 percent of the TMC) are presently, or recently have been federally or state-protected, or are of specific importance to Tribes, either through the ESA, through separate federal legislation, or through state or Tribal recognition. Among these 18 taxa are at least 10 extant endangered species exist in the CRE, including: 1 terrestrial gastropod, 1 fish species, 4 bird species, and several incidentallyoccurring listed bird taxa (Appendix A).
Non-listed Extirpated, Declining, and At-risk TMC: Extirpated or at-risk species that are not federally listed make up the majority of the TMC in the CRE. These species include all of the above taxa. A total of 46 (53.5 percent) of all TMC had restoration potential scores >50, suggesting that they may warrant management attention, including research, monitoring, or restoration. For example, Goodding’s willow (Salix gooddingii) has disappeared from numerous localities at which it occurred at and before 1963, with loss related to beaver foraging and postdam recruitment failure driven by coarsened grain size (Stevens 1989, Grand Canyon Wildlands Council, Inc. 2009). However, the quality of status and distribution data on at least 52 (61 percent) of the TMC was inadequate to determine management needs or options for many rare taxa, including plant, invertebrate, herpetofaunal (especially amphibians and snakes), mamml, and migratory bird and bat taxa.
Non-Native Species: Although the focus of this report is on native TMC, we note the presence of several hundred non-native taxa (particularly plants, fish, several invertebrates, and several birds), which interact with native species in complex fashions and play important ecological roles in the CRE. A more comprehensive ecosystem-based understanding of the role of nonnative species is warranted, but is beyond the scope of this report. [2]

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Updates

Fish

Reptiles and Amphibians

Invertebrates

Birds

  • California Condor
  • Mexican Spotted Owl
  • Bald Eagle
  • Golden Eagle
  • Peregrine Falcon
  • Prairie Falcon
  • Osprey
  • Gambel’s quail

Mammals

  • Muskrat
  • American beaver
  • Badger
  • Bats
  • Spotted skunk

Plants

  • Gooddings willow
  • Fremont cottonwood
  • Coyote willow
  • Honey mesquite
  • Netleaf hackberry

Invasives

  • Crayfish
  • Dreissena mussels
  • New Zealand mudsnail
  • Tamarisk and Tamarisk leaf-beetles
  • Camel thorn



Links

Presentations and Papers

Other Stuff