The Western Section of The Wildlife Society and Wildlife Research Institute Western Raptor Symposium February 8-9, 2011 Riverside, California

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The Western Section of The Wildlife Society and Wildlife Research Institute Western Raptor Symposium February 8-9, 2011 Riverside, California Symposium Sponsors February 9 08:55-09:15 am Session: Raptor Management and Monitoring Burrowing Owls and the Western Riverside County Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP): An Active Approach to Species Recovery Jared Bond, Riverside County Environmental Programs Division., 40 80 Lemon Street, 12 th floor., Riverside, CA, 92501; (951) 955-0314; jbond@rctlma.org; Jeff W. Kidd, Kidd Biological Inc., 18562 Frantz Road, Perris CA, 92570; Peter H. Bloom, Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, 439 Calle San Pablo, Camarillo, CA 93012 Since the adoption of the Western Multi Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP) in 2004, Riverside County has been actively working towards a quantifiable approach to conservation objectives for burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia) as set forth in the plan. Plan objectives require establishment of 5 core burrowing owl conservation areas with a combined total breeding population of 120 burrowing owls throughout the plan area. Riverside County has developed an active multi level approach to achieving burrowing owl conservation. We provide a review and analysis of the conservation strategies currently being implemented including the methods and results of burrowing owl translocations, installation of artificial burrows, enhancement of grassland habitat, and movement of individual burrowing owls within the MSHCP. We explore the success and challenges of implemented techniques and what additional methods may be necessary to achieve the MSHCP burrowing owl conservation objective. The authors and institutions that have provided the following presentations are happy to share their information, data, and opinions. However, these are not, necessarily, peer-reviewed presentations and the potential to take something out of context also exists. In order to avoid that, you are requested to contact the respective lead authors(s) before using specific information contained in any of the following papers. Once you have done that, the proper citation is: '[Author(s). Date. Title.] Presented at the Western Raptor Symposium. Jeffrey L. Lincer and David Bittner (Co-Chairs). Hosted by Wildlife Research Institute and The Wildlife Society, Western Section. Riverside Convention center, Riverside, California, USA. February 8-9, 2011

Burrowing Owls and the Western Riverside County Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP): An Active Approach to Species Recovery Prepared by Jared Bond Senior Ecological Resources Specialist Riverside County Environmental Programs Division

What is the MSHCP? A multi-jurisdictional Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) focusing on conservation of species and their associated habitats in Western Riverside County. Issued by USFWS and CDFG Created in 2004 Plan Area~1.26 million acres Covers 146 native species Approx 23 Permittees, The MSHCP serves as an HCP pursuant to Section 10(a)(1)(B) of the federal Endangered Species Act of 1973 (FESA), as well as a Natural Communities Conservation Plan (NCCP) under the NCCP Act of 2001. Authorize "Take" of plant and wildlife species identified within the Plan Area. (I.E. Quino Checkerspot, SKR, etc.) Regional Conservation Authority (RCA) - Joint powers authority responsible for implementing MSHCP - Acquires Conserved Lands In exchange for the assembly and management of a coordinated MSHCP Conservation Area

MSHCP and BUOW MSHCP Covers 45 Avian Species Including BUOW and 14 other raptors BUOW- Additional Survey Species Requires additional surveys in order to achieve coverage (Take) for the species. Established BUOW Species Objectives Establish BUOW Survey Area Establish BUOW Survey Protocol BUOW Species Objectives Establish 5 Core Areas 120 breeding individuals Minimum of 5 breeding pair per Core Area Establish Translocation sites within Plan Area

BUOW and THE MSHCP Implemented at the project level during development review/entitlement WHAT HAPPENS WHEN OWLS ARE LOCATED 1) If the site is within the Criteria Area, then at least 90% of the area with long-term conservation value will be included in the MSHCP Conservation Area. 2) If the site contains, less than 35 acres of suitable habitat and fewer than 3 pairs of BUOW, then relocate. 3) If the site supports 3 or more BUOW and is greater than 35 acres, then 90% of the area with long-term conservation value and burrowing owl pairs will be conserved onsite. The survey and conservation requirements stated in this objective will be eliminated when Species Objectives have been met.

How are BUOW Conserved? BUOW exist on Conserved Lands Conserve occupied habitat Enhance breeding opportunities on Conserved lands Translocation

What has been done? 2006 -Survey Existing Conserved Lands 2006 Acquisition of El Sol property 2007 Assessment of BUOW habitat and 1 st Artificial Burrow Installed 2007-Vegetation management- 100 head of cattle 2007 DRAFT BUOW Management Plan 2008-Individual BUOW start to be banded 2008- El Sol Translocation Approved 2009- Continue Artificial Burrow installation, banding, wildlife cameras 2009- El Sol Translocation Approved 2010- Partners Grant Approved for Lake Mathews (1 of 5 BUOW Cores) 2010-DRAFT BUOW Management Plan updated 2010- ~ 11 breeding pairs on Conserved Lands

EL Sol Approximately 405 acres of conservation Acquired in 2006 through the Habitat Acquisition and Negotiation Strategy (HANS) process Occupied by BUOW Contributes to assembly of BUOW Core Owned by the RCA

1 st Artificial Burrow installation- November 2007 RCA collaborated Boy Scouts of America Eagle Scout Project Total of 10 artificial burrows installed 5 wood 5 plastic Placed in groups to simulate burrow clusters

AF burrows Natural Nest 3 Natural Nest 2 Natural Nest 1

Additional Artificial Burrows Installed

Two additional burrows installed in 2008 using 6 diameter single entrance

Owls Respond!

Banding at El Sol All BUOW banded with both USFWS/USGS metal band and Auxiliary color band

2008-4 BUOW banded 2009-22 BUOW banded 2010-16 BUOW banded

TRANSLOCATION 1 st Translocation- 2008 Single BUOW from project site located during 30-day preconstruction survey. Bird was never moved 2 nd Translocation- 2009 BUOW s brought into captivity located during 30-day preconstruction survey. Paired and then hacked at El Sol 3 rd - Single BUOW, hard released at the El Sol property

Two Hacking Enclosures constructed Enclosure 1. Potential breeding pair Enclosure 2. Single unpaired bird

Hacking Enclosures

2010- Partners Grant 1. Granted $7,500 to Riverside County Habitat Conservation Authority (RCHCA) 2. Construct 50 Artificial Burrows on RCHCA Conserved Lands at Lake Mathews 3. USFWS Volunteers

Assembling 50 Nest Boxes

50 wooden AB s installed Fall 2010

Road to 120- Achieving Species Objectives Continue to enhance breeding opportunities on Core Areas ~130 AB s Focused banding and monitoring effort across the MSHCP Quantify to verify 120 BUOW s

Road to 120- Achieving Species Objectives Develop BUOW Strike Team reserve managers, local raptor experts Identify Alternative Core based on where owls are found- importance of urban owls? Streamline Active Relocation/Translocation- County M.O.U. with State Coordination of ALL PERMITEES via RCA for BUOW consistency Phase 2 Habitat Enhancement- CA Ground Squirrel re-intro

Questions? THANKS! Jeff Kidd Biological Bloom Biological Brian Shomo- RCHCA Dustin McLain-County Parks Boy Scouts of America Leslie MacNair-CDFG Jonathan Snapp-Cook Karin Cleary-Rose-USFWS Bill Kronland