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AUGUSTIN BERNAL MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL PROJECT DRAFT INITIAL STUDY <br /> backwaters within streams, ponds, marshes, springs, and artificial impoundments such as stock ponds. <br /> Duringthe non-breeding season,they need moist areas in which to take refugefrom the heat and predators, <br /> such as intermittent or ephemeral streams with dense riparian vegetation, overhanging banks, and <br /> rootwads; springs or spring boxes; rodent burrows; and damp leaf litter in riparian woodlands. (Ford et al. <br /> 2013) <br /> The USFWS designated 450,288 acres of critical habitat for California red-legged frog in 19 California <br /> counties on May 15, 2006(71 FR 19243). Critical habitat for this species has been revised several times <br /> since 2006, with the most recent revision (and the one currently in effect) dated March 17, 2010 and <br /> comprising approximately 1,636,609 acres in 27 counties (75 FR 12816). Critical habitat designations <br /> include smaller discrete areas called primary constituent element(PCE),which describe aspects of physical <br /> or biological features on which the species is dependent. PCEs of designated California red-legged frog <br /> critical habitat are summarized as follows: <br /> 1. Aauatic Breeding Habitat:Standing bodies of fresh water(with salinities less than 4.5 ppt.), <br /> including natural and manmade(e.g.,stock) ponds,slow-moving streams or pools within streams, <br /> and other ephemeral or permanent water bodies that typically become inundated during winter <br /> rains and hold water for a minimum of 20 weeks in all but the driest of years; <br /> 2. Aquatic Non-Breeding Habitat: Freshwater pond and stream habitats that may not hold water long <br /> enough for the species to complete its aquatic life cycle but which provide for shelter,foraging, <br /> predator avoidance,and aquatic dispersal of juvenile and adult California red-legged frogs. Other <br /> wetland habitats considered to meet these criteria include, but are not limited to: plunge pools <br /> within intermittent creeks,seeps, quiet backwaters within streams during high water flows,and <br /> springs of sufficient flow to provide mesic surface conditions during dry periods; <br /> 3. Upland Habitat: upland areas adjacent to or surrounding breeding and non-breeding aquatic and <br /> riparian habitat up to a distance of 1 mile in most cases(i.e., depending on surrounding <br /> landscape and dispersal barriers) including various vegetation types such as grassland, <br /> woodland,forest,wetland,or riparian areas that provide shelter,forage, and predator avoidance <br /> for the California red-legged frog; and, <br /> 4. Dispersal Habitat:Accessible upland or riparian habitat within and between occupied or <br /> previously occupied sites that are located within 1 mile of each other,and that support <br /> movement between such sites. <br /> The project site does not overlap with any designated critical habitat units for California red-legged frog. <br /> Subunit ALA-16 of the Alameda and Contra Costa Counties critical habitat unit is approximately 2.7 miles <br /> northwest of the site. <br /> California red-legged frog has low potential to occur on the project site during the rainy season (generally <br /> October to April).The closest known CNDDB occurrence is a 2016 observation of adults and metamorphs <br /> in a pond on Pleasanton Ridge approximately 1.1 mile to the northwest. Another pond visible on Google <br /> Earth aerial imagery approximately 0.9 mile northwest of the site also appears to be suitable for breeding. <br /> Individual red-legged frogs potentially breeding in these ponds could move through the project site when <br /> dispersing to or from these ponds to other breeding habitat on Pleasanton Ridge on rainy nights.The site <br /> does not contain any streams or ponds that provide aquatic breeding habitat, however,and the ephemeral <br /> drainages lack vegetation that remains moist year-round(e.g.,seeps, riparian vegetation)and therefore do <br /> 12956 <br /> DUDEK 35 April 2022 <br />