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AUGUSTIN BERNAL MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL PROJECT DRAFT INITIAL STUDY <br /> 12956 <br />DUDEK 34 April 2022 <br />Table 3.4-2. Special-Status Wildlife Species with Potential to Occur on the Project Site <br />Scientific <br />Name <br />Common <br />Name <br />Status <br />(Federal/State) Habitat Potential to Occur <br />woodland, and riparian <br />and chaparral with oak. <br />2021 survey. Nesting <br />not confirmed, but <br />site contains high- <br />quality nesting <br />habitat. <br />Mammals <br />Antrozous <br />pallidus <br />pallid bat None/SSC Grasslands, shrublands, <br />woodlands, forests; <br />most common in open, <br />dry habitats with rocky <br />outcrops for roosting, <br />but also roosts in <br />artificial structures and <br />trees. <br />Moderate potential to <br />occur. The project <br />site contains coast <br />live oaks with tree <br />hollows that may be <br />suitable for roosting. <br />Lasiurus <br />blossevillii <br />western red <br />bat <br />None/SSC Forest, woodland, <br />riparian, mesquite <br />bosque, and orchards, <br />including fig, apricot, <br />peach, pear, almond, <br />walnut, and orange; <br />roosts in tree canopy. <br />Moderate potential to <br />occur. The project <br />site supports suitable <br />habitat for this and <br />other foliage-roosting <br />bats. <br />Lasiurus <br />cinereus <br />hoary bat None/None1 Forest, woodland <br />riparian, and wetland <br />habitats; also juniper <br />scrub, riparian forest, <br />and desert scrub in arid <br />areas; roosts in tree <br />foliage and sometimes <br />cavities, such as <br />woodpecker holes. <br />Moderate potential to <br />occur. The project <br />site supports suitable <br />habitat for this and <br />other foliage-roosting <br />bats. <br />Source: CDFW 2021a <br />Federal <br />BCC =Bird of Conservation Concern <br />FT = Federally Threatened <br />State <br />FP = Fully Protected <br />SSC = California Species of Special Concern <br />ST = State Threatened <br />WL = Watch List <br />1 Western Bat Working Group Medium Priority <br />California red-legged frog <br />California red-legged frog is a federally threatened species and California Species of Special Concern that <br />occurs primarily in coastal drainages of central California from Marin County south to northern Baja <br />California, Mexico, and in isolated drainages in the Sierra Nevada, northern Coast, and northern Transverse <br />Ranges. Like most amphibians, California red-legged frogs require aquatic habitats for breeding and <br />adjacent riparian and upland habitats for movement and dispersal. Breeding sites include pools and