Taking and Importing Marine Mammals; Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to Geophysical Surveys Related to Oil and Gas Activities in the Gulf of Mexico
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Issuing agencies
Abstract
In accordance with the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), as amended, its implementing regulations, and NMFS' MMPA Regulations for Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to Geophysical Surveys Related to Oil and Gas Activities in the Gulf of Mexico, notification is hereby given that a Letter of Authorization (LOA) has been issued to Chevron U.S.A. Inc. (Chevron) for the take of marine mammals incidental to geophysical survey activity in the Gulf of Mexico.
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 86 Issue 133 (Thursday, July 15, 2021)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 133 (Thursday, July 15, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 37313-37316]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2021-15048]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[RTID 0648-XB212]
Taking and Importing Marine Mammals; Taking Marine Mammals
Incidental to Geophysical Surveys Related to Oil and Gas Activities in
the Gulf of Mexico
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of issuance of Letter of Authorization.
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SUMMARY: In accordance with the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), as
amended, its implementing regulations, and NMFS' MMPA Regulations for
Taking Marine Mammals Incidental to Geophysical Surveys Related to Oil
and Gas Activities in the Gulf of Mexico, notification is hereby given
that a Letter of Authorization (LOA) has been issued to Chevron U.S.A.
Inc. (Chevron) for the take of marine mammals incidental to geophysical
survey activity in the Gulf of Mexico.
DATES: The LOA is effective from August 1, 2021, through June 1, 2022.
ADDRESSES: The LOA, LOA request, and supporting documentation are
available online at: <a href="http://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/incidental-take-authorization-oil-and-gas-industry-geophysical-survey-activity-gulf-mexico">www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/incidental-take-authorization-oil-and-gas-industry-geophysical-survey-activity-gulf-mexico</a>. In case of problems accessing these documents, please call the
contact listed below (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben Laws, Office of Protected
Resources, NMFS, (301) 427-8401.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Sections 101(a)(5)(A) and (D) of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.)
direct the Secretary of Commerce to allow, upon request, the
incidental, but not intentional, taking of small numbers of marine
mammals by U.S. citizens who engage in a specified activity (other than
commercial fishing) within a specified geographical region if certain
findings are made and either regulations are issued or, if the taking
is limited to harassment, a notice of a proposed authorization is
provided to the public for review.
An authorization for incidental takings shall be granted if NMFS
finds that the taking will have a negligible impact on the species or
stock(s), will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the
availability of the species or stock(s) for subsistence uses (where
relevant), and if the permissible methods of taking and requirements
pertaining to the mitigation, monitoring and reporting of such takings
are set forth. NMFS has defined ``negligible impact'' in 50 CFR 216.103
as an impact resulting from the specified activity that cannot be
reasonably expected to, and is not reasonably likely to, adversely
affect the species or stock through effects on annual rates of
recruitment or survival.
Except with respect to certain activities not pertinent here, the
MMPA defines ``harassment'' as: Any act of pursuit, torment, or
annoyance which (i) has the potential to injure a marine mammal or
marine mammal stock in the wild (Level A harassment); or (ii) has the
potential to disturb a marine mammal or marine mammal stock in the wild
by causing disruption of behavioral patterns, including, but not
limited to, migration, breathing, nursing, breeding, feeding, or
sheltering (Level B harassment).
On January 19, 2021, we issued a final rule with regulations to
govern the unintentional taking of marine mammals incidental to
geophysical survey activities conducted by oil and gas industry
operators, and those persons authorized to conduct activities on their
behalf (collectively ``industry operators''), in Federal waters of the
U.S. Gulf of Mexico (GOM) over the course of 5 years (86 FR 5322;
January 19, 2021). The rule was based on our findings that the total
taking from the specified activities over the 5-year period will have a
negligible impact on the affected species or stock(s) of marine mammals
and will not have an unmitigable adverse impact on the availability of
those species or stocks for subsistence uses. The rule became effective
on April 19, 2021.
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Our regulations at 50 CFR 217.180 et seq. allow for the issuance of
LOAs to industry operators for the incidental take of marine mammals
during geophysical survey activities and prescribe the permissible
methods of taking and other means of effecting the least practicable
adverse impact on marine mammal species or stocks and their habitat
(often referred to as mitigation), as well as requirements pertaining
to the monitoring and reporting of such taking. Under 50 CFR
217.186(e), issuance of an LOA shall be based on a determination that
the level of taking will be consistent with the findings made for the
total taking allowable under these regulations and a determination that
the amount of take authorized under the LOA is of no more than small
numbers.
Summary of Request and Analysis
Chevron plans to conduct a 3D borehole seismic survey using an
airgun array as the sound source, covering portions of approximately 40
lease blocks centered around Lease Block G16942 (Big Foot). The survey
is a type of vertical seismic profile (VSP) survey. The array consists
of 32 elements, with a total volume of 5,040 cubic inches (in\3\).
Please see Chevron's application for additional detail.
Consistent with the preamble to the final rule, the survey effort
proposed by Chevron in its LOA request was used to develop LOA-specific
take estimates based on the acoustic exposure modeling results
described in the preamble (86 FR 5322, 5398; January 19, 2021). In
order to generate the appropriate take number for authorization, the
following information was considered: (1) Survey type; (2) location (by
modeling zone); \1\ (3) number of days; and (4) season.\2\ The acoustic
exposure modeling performed in support of the rule provides 24-hour
exposure estimates for each species, specific to each modeled survey
type in each zone and season.
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\1\ For purposes of acoustic exposure modeling, the GOM was
divided into seven zones. Zone 1 is not included in the geographic
scope of the rule.
\2\ For purposes of acoustic exposure modeling, seasons include
Winter (December-March) and Summer (April-November).
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No VSP surveys were included in the modeled survey types, and use
of existing proxies (i.e., 2D, 3D NAZ, 3D WAZ, Coil) is generally
conservative for use in evaluation of VSP survey effort. Summary
descriptions of these modeled survey geometries are available in the
preamble to the proposed rule (83 FR 29212, 29220; June 22, 2018). 3D
NAZ was selected as the best available proxy survey type. In addition,
all available acoustic exposure modeling results assume use of a 72
element, 8,000 in\3\ array. In this case, take numbers authorized
through the LOA are considered conservative due to differences in both
the airgun array and the survey geometry planned by Chevron, as
compared to those modeled for the rule.
The survey is planned to occur for 22 days, with 14 days occurring
in Zone 5 and 8 days in Zone 7. The season is not known in advance.
Therefore, the take estimates for each species are based on the season
that has the greater value for the species (i.e., winter or summer).
For some species, take estimates based solely on the modeling
yielded results that are not realistically likely to occur when
considered in light of other relevant information available during the
rulemaking process regarding marine mammal occurrence in the GOM. Thus,
although the modeling conducted for the rule is a natural starting
point for estimating take, our rule acknowledged that other information
could be considered (see, e.g., 86 FR 5322, 5442 (January 19, 2021),
discussing the need to provide flexibility and make efficient use of
previous public and agency review of other information and identifying
that additional public review is not necessary unless the model or
inputs used differ substantively from those that were previously
reviewed by NMFS and the public). For this survey, NMFS has other
relevant information reviewed during the rulemaking that indicates use
of the acoustic exposure modeling to generate a take estimate for
certain marine mammal species produces results inconsistent with what
is known regarding their occurrence in the GOM. Accordingly, we have
adjusted the calculated take estimates for those species as described
below.
Rice's whales (formerly known as GOM Bryde's whales) \3\ are
generally found within a small area in the northeastern GOM in waters
between 100-400 meters (m) depth along the continental shelf break
(Rosel et al., 2016). Whaling records suggest that Rice's whales
historically had a broader distribution within similar habitat
parameters throughout the GOM (Reeves et al., 2011; Rosel and Wilcox,
2014), and a NOAA survey reported observation of a Rice's whale in the
western GOM in 2017 (NMFS, 2018). Habitat-based density modeling
identified similar habitat (i.e., approximately 100-400 m water depths
along the continental shelf break) as being potential Rice's whale
habitat (Roberts et al., 2016), although a ``core habitat area''
defined in the northeastern GOM (outside the scope of the rule)
contained approximately 92 percent of the predicted abundance of Rice's
whales. See discussion provided at, e.g., 83 FR 29212, 29228, 29280
(June 22, 2018); 86 FR 5322, 5418 (January 19, 2021).
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\3\ The final rule refers to the GOM Bryde's whale (Balaenoptera
edeni). These whales were subsequently described as a new species,
Rice's whale (Balaenoptera ricei) (Rosel et al., 2021).
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Although it is possible that Rice's whales may occur outside of
their core habitat, NMFS expects that any such occurrence would be
limited to the narrow band of suitable habitat described above (i.e.,
100-400 m). Chevron's planned activity will occur in water depths of
approximately 1,200-2,000 m in the central GOM. NMFS does not expect
there to be the reasonable potential for take of Rice's whale in
association with this survey and, accordingly, does not authorize take
of Rice's whale through this LOA.
Killer whales are the most rarely encountered species in the GOM,
typically in deep waters of the central GOM (Roberts et al., 2015;
Maze-Foley and Mullin, 2006). The approach used in the acoustic
exposure modeling, in which seven modeling zones were defined over the
U.S. GOM, necessarily averages fine-scale information about marine
mammal distribution over the large area of each modeling zone. NMFS has
determined that the approach results in unrealistic projections
regarding the likelihood of encountering killer whales.
As discussed in the final rule, the density models produced by
Roberts et al. (2016) provide the best available scientific information
regarding predicted density patterns of cetaceans in the U.S. GOM. The
predictions represent the output of models derived from multi-year
observations and associated environmental parameters that incorporate
corrections for detection bias. However, in the case of killer whales,
the model is informed by few data, as indicated by the coefficient of
variation associated with the abundance predicted by the model (0.41,
the second-highest of any GOM species model; Roberts et al., 2016). The
model's authors noted the expected non-uniform distribution of this
rarely-encountered species (as discussed above) and expressed that, due
to the limited data available to inform the model, it ``should be
viewed cautiously'' (Roberts et al., 2015).
NOAA surveys in the GOM from 1992-2009 reported only 16 sightings
of killer whales, with an additional three encounters during more
recent survey
[[Page 37315]]
effort from 2017-18 (Waring et al., 2013; <a href="http://www.boem.gov/gommapps">www.boem.gov/gommapps</a>). Two
other species were also observed on less than 20 occasions during the
1992-2009 NOAA surveys (Fraser's dolphin and false killer whale).\4\
However, observational data collected by protected species observers
(PSOs) on industry geophysical survey vessels from 2002-2015
distinguish the killer whale in terms of rarity. During this period,
killer whales were encountered on only 10 occasions, whereas the next
most rarely encountered species (Fraser's dolphin) was recorded on 69
occasions (Barkaszi and Kelly, 2019). The false killer whale and pygmy
killer whale were the next most rarely encountered species, with 110
records each. The killer whale was the species with the lowest
detection frequency during each period over which PSO data were
synthesized (2002-2008 and 2009-2015). This information qualitatively
informed our rulemaking process, as discussed at 86 FR 5322, 5334
(January 19, 2021), and similarly informs our analysis here.
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\4\ However, note that these species have been observed over a
greater range of water depths in the GOM than have killer whales.
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The rarity of encounter during seismic surveys is not likely to be
the product of high bias on the probability of detection. Unlike
certain cryptic species with high detection bias, such as Kogia spp. or
beaked whales, or deep-diving species with high availability bias, such
as beaked whales or sperm whales, killer whales are typically available
for detection when present and are easily observed. Roberts et al.
(2015) stated that availability is not a major factor affecting
detectability of killer whales from shipboard surveys, as they are not
a particularly long-diving species. Baird et al. (2005) reported that
mean dive durations for 41 fish-eating killer whales for dives greater
than or equal to 1 minute in duration was 2.3-2.4 minutes, and Hooker
et al. (2012) reported that killer whales spent 78 percent of their
time at depths between 0-10 m. Similarly, Kvadsheim et al. (2012)
reported data from a study of four killer whales, noting that the
whales performed 20 times as many dives to 1-30 m depth than to deeper
waters, with an average depth during those most common dives of
approximately 3 m.
In summary, killer whales are the most rarely encountered species
in the GOM and typically occur only in particularly deep water. While
this information is reflected through the density model informing the
acoustic exposure modeling results, there is relatively high
uncertainty associated with the model for this species, and the
acoustic exposure modeling applies mean distribution data over areas
where the species is in fact less likely to occur. NMFS' determination
in reflection of the data discussed above, which informed the final
rule, is that use of the generic acoustic exposure modeling results for
killer whales would result in high estimated take numbers that are
inconsistent with the assumptions made in the rule regarding expected
killer whale take (86 FR 5322, 5403; January 19, 2021).
In past authorizations, NMFS has often addressed situations
involving the low likelihood of encountering a rare species such as
killer whales in the GOM through authorization of take of a single
group of average size (i.e., representing a single potential
encounter). See 83 FR 63268, December 7, 2018. See also 86 FR 29090,
May 28, 2021; 85 FR 55645, September 9, 2020. For the reasons expressed
above, NMFS determined that a single encounter of killer whales is more
likely than the model-generated estimates and has authorized take
associated with a single killer whale group encounter (i.e., up to 7
animals).
Based on the results of our analysis, NMFS has determined that the
level of taking authorized through the LOA is consistent with the
findings made for the total taking allowable under the regulations. See
Table 1 in this notice and Table 9 of the rule (86 FR 5322; January 19,
2021).
Small Numbers Determination
Under the GOM rule, NMFS may not authorize incidental take of
marine mammals in an LOA if it will exceed ``small numbers.'' In short,
when an acceptable estimate of the individual marine mammals taken is
available, if the estimated number of individual animals taken is up
to, but not greater than, one-third of the best available abundance
estimate, NMFS will determine that the numbers of marine mammals taken
of a species or stock are small. For more information please see NMFS'
discussion of the MMPA's small numbers requirement provided in the
final rule (86 FR 5322, 5438; January 19, 2021).
The take numbers for authorization are determined as described
above. Subsequently, the total incidents of harassment for each species
are multiplied by scalar ratios to produce a derived product that
better reflects the number of individuals likely to be taken within a
survey (as compared to the total number of instances of take),
accounting for the likelihood that some individual marine mammals may
be taken on more than one day (see 86 FR 5322, 5404; January 19, 2021).
The output of this scaling, where appropriate, is incorporated into an
adjusted total take estimate that is the basis for NMFS' small numbers
determination, as depicted in Table 1 for Chevron's 22-day survey.
This product is used by NMFS in making the necessary small numbers
determination, through comparison with the best available abundance
estimates (see discussion at 86 FR 5322, 5391; January 19, 2021). For
this comparison, NMFS' approach is to use the maximum theoretical
population, determined through review of current stock abundance
reports (SAR; <a href="http://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments">www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/marine-mammal-protection/marine-mammal-stock-assessments</a>) and model-predicted abundance
information (<a href="https://seamap.env.duke.edu/models/Duke/GOM/">https://seamap.env.duke.edu/models/Duke/GOM/</a>). For the
latter, for taxa where a density surface model could be produced, we
use the maximum mean seasonal (i.e., three-month) abundance prediction
for purposes of comparison as a precautionary smoothing of month-to-
month fluctuations and in consideration of a corresponding lack of data
in the literature regarding seasonal distribution of marine mammals in
the GOM. Information supporting the small numbers determinations is
provided in Table 1.
Table 1--Take Analysis
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Authorized Scaled take
Species take \1\ Abundance \2\ % Abundance
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Sperm whale..................................... 673 284.7 2,207 12.9
Kogia spp....................................... \3\ 255 79.6 4,373 2.0
Beaked whales................................... 3,423 345.7 3,768 9.2
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Rough-toothed dolphin........................... 491 140.9 4,853 2.9
Bottlenose dolphin.............................. 2,154 618.2 176,108 0.4
Clymene dolphin................................. 1,552 445.4 11,895 3.7
Atlantic spotted dolphin........................ 834 239.4 74,785 0.3
Pantropical spotted dolphin..................... 8,521 2,445.5 102,361 2.4
Spinner dolphin................................. 1,618 464.4 25,114 1.8
Striped dolphin................................. 642 184.3 5,229 3.5
Fraser's dolphin................................ 188 54.0 1,665 3.2
Risso's dolphin................................. 429 126.6 3,764 3.4
Melon-headed whale.............................. 1,008 297.4 7,003 4.2
Pygmy killer whale.............................. 248 73.2 2,126 3.4
False killer whale.............................. 361 106.5 3,204 3.3
Killer whale.................................... 7 n/a 267 2.6
Short-finned pilot whale........................ 251 74.0 1,981 3.7
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\1\ Scalar ratios were applied to ``Authorized Take'' values as described at 86 FR 5322, 5404 (January 19, 2021)
to derive scaled take numbers shown here.
\2\ Best abundance estimate. For most taxa, the best abundance estimate for purposes of comparison with take
estimates is considered here to be the model-predicted abundance (Roberts et al., 2016). For those taxa where
a density surface model predicting abundance by month was produced, the maximum mean seasonal abundance was
used. For those taxa where abundance is not predicted by month, only mean annual abundance is available. For
the killer whale, the larger estimated SAR abundance estimate is used.
\3\ Includes 7 takes by Level A harassment and 248 takes by Level B harassment. Scalar ratio is applied to takes
by Level B harassment only; small numbers determination made on basis of scaled Level B harassment take plus
authorized Level A harassment take.
Based on the analysis contained herein of Chevron's proposed survey
activity described in its LOA application and the anticipated take of
marine mammals, NMFS finds that small numbers of marine mammals will be
taken relative to the affected species or stock sizes and therefore is
of no more than small numbers.
Authorization
NMFS has determined that the level of taking for this LOA request
is consistent with the findings made for the total taking allowable
under the incidental take regulations and that the amount of take
authorized under the LOA is of no more than small numbers. Accordingly,
we have issued an LOA to Chevron authorizing the take of marine mammals
incidental to its geophysical survey activity, as described above.
Dated: July 12, 2021.
Catherine Marzin,
Acting Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2021-15048 Filed 7-14-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
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