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Resource Analysis and Data Discovery Tool, A tool for Industry, Developers and Wildlife Resources
Region: Salt Lake Office
ID: 6626
Project Status: Completed
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Project Details
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Need for Project
The Utah Natural Heritage Program, which is part of the Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife Resources (DWR) built and maintains an Environmental Review Tool (ERT) that allows external users to identify an area of interest and generate a report of animals and plants of concern within a two-mile buffer of the area of interest. The ERT has served DWR well, but management and users have requested additional information to be available in the reports and additional features in the system. DWR would like to: *Expand the existing tool to include robust impact and GIS analysis tools *Streamline reports to expedite environmental review processes *Support resource decision-making by improving the availability of heritage localities, migration corridor data, wildlife habitat layers, and other supporting natural resource datasets.
Provide evidence about the nature of the problem and the need to address it. Identify the significance of the problem using a variety of data sources. For example, if a habitat restoration project is being proposed to benefit greater sage-grouse, describe the existing plant community characteristics that limit habitat value for greater sage-grouse and identify the changes needed for habitat improvement.
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Objectives
Current workflows require natural resource professionals to use many tools to look for wildlife information. Building this analysis tool will improve customer service and consistency by providing a one-stop shop for authoritative wildlife datasets. The Division of Wildlife Resources (DWR) needs to advance the administration of wildlife data, especially rare species records, to promote wildlife conservation across the state. These critical datasets include game species habitat layers, conservation species locations, and migration corridors. The current tool is dependent on occurrence points that insufficiently represent true species distributions. Though consultants and partners use this information, it lacks an actionable environmental context for wildlife decision-making. We plan to add species habitats and migration corridors to the RATool, making wildlife management data available to all project planners. Accessible data will then aid in conserving crucial habitats and migration corridors. Building a robust geographic analysis tool would promote improved wildlife planning efforts. This tool will inform management actions, avoid species listing under the Endangered Species Act, and maintain wildlife migration corridors.
Provide an overall goal for the project and then provide clear, specific and measurable objectives (outcomes) to be accomplished by the proposed actions. If possible, tie to one or more of the public benefits UWRI is providing.
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Project Location/Timing Justification (Why Here? Why Now?)
This tool will allow resource specialists, industry, and others to identify early during project development wildlife and their habitats. This tool will communicate best management practices for species identified within spatial locations identified by the user. See the attachment for a sample report.
LOCATION: Justify the proposed location of this project over other areas, include publicly scrutinized planning/recovery documents that list this area as a priority, remote sensing modeling that show this area is a good candidate for restoration, wildlife migration information and other data that help justify this project's location.
TIMING: Justify why this project should be implemented at this time. For example, Is the project area at risk of crossing an ecological or other threshold wherein future restoration would become more difficult, cost prohibitive, or even impossible.
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Relation to Management Plans
Examples of Management Plans that will leverage RADD Tool include: Utah Wildlife Action Plan Utah Statewide Elk Management Plan Utah Beaver Management Plan Utah Bighorn Sheep Statewide Management Plan Utah Wild Turkey Management Plan Utah Mule Deer Statewide Management Plan Utah Upland Game Management Plan Utah Conservation Plan for Greater Sage-grouse
List management plans where this project will address an objective or strategy in the plan. Describe how the project area overlaps the objective or strategy in the plan and the relevance of the project to the successful implementation of those plans. It is best to provide this information in a list format with the description immediately following the plan objective or strategy.
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Fire/Fuels
N/A
If applicable, detail how the proposed project will significantly reduce the risk of fuel loading and/or continuity of hazardous fuels including the use of fire-wise species in re-seeding operations. Describe the value of any features being protected by reducing the risk of fire. Values may include; communities at risk, permanent infrastructure, municipal watersheds, campgrounds, critical wildlife habitat, etc. Include the size of the area where fuels are being reduced and the distance from the feature(s) at risk.
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Water Quality/Quantity
N/A
Describe how the project has the potential to improve water quality and/or increase water quantity, both over the short and long term. Address run-off, erosion, soil infiltration, and flooding, if applicable.
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Compliance
This tool will help industry and resource professionals ensure that wildlife and their habitat are not negatively impacts by project related activities. The understanding of wildlife resources in project areas will provide the opportunity to avoid, minimize and/or mitigate early in the planning process.
Description of efforts, both completed and planned, to bring the proposed action into compliance with any and all cultural resource, NEPA, ESA, etc. requirements. If compliance is not required enter "not applicable" and explain why not it is not required.
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Methods
Contract with a firm that can help achieve the following: Identify project stakeholders and coordinate resources Establish points of contact Establish the mechanics of project communication, reporting, collaboration, risk management, and change management Establish status meeting cadence Review and verify the scope of work and project approach Review project risks and risk mitigation strategies Review and finalize task assignments
Describe the actions, activities, tasks to be implemented as part of the proposed project; how these activities will be carried out, equipment to be used, when, and by whom.
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Monitoring
N/A
Describe plans to monitor for project success and achievement of stated objectives. Include details on type of monitoring (vegetation, wildlife, etc.), schedule, assignments and how the results of these monitoring efforts will be reported and/or uploaded to this project page. If needed, upload detailed plans in the "attachments" section.
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Partners
The DWR has solicited feedback from Utah Division of Oil, Gas and Mining, Utah Division of Transportation, environmental consulting firms, and ESMF advisory council. This tool could be applicable to state and federal government agencies, oil and gas industry, mining industry, water users, developers, solar industry, wind developers and numerous other sectors.
List any and all partners (agencies, organizations, NGO's, private landowners) that support the proposal and/or have been contacted and included in the planning and design of the proposed project. Describe efforts to gather input and include these agencies, landowners, permitees, sportsman groups, researchers, etc. that may be interested/affected by the proposed project. Partners do not have to provide funding or in-kind services to a project to be listed.
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Future Management
The creation of user friendly RADD tool will allow DWR, industry, and partners to conduct management work to help prevent species of concern from being federally listed as threatened or endangered, and work to delist those species that are currently listed.
Detail future methods or techniques (including administrative actions) that will be implemented to help in accomplishing the stated objectives and to insure the long term success/stability of the proposed project. This may include: post-treatment grazing rest and/or management plans/changes, wildlife herd/species management plan changes, ranch plans, conservation easements or other permanent protection plans, resource management plans, forest plans, etc.
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Sustainable Uses of Natural Resources
This tool will provide timely information for industry and other project proponent on wildlife resources in Utah. Increasing knowledge of crucial fish and wildlife habitats and migration patterns. Providing industry the ability to decrease risk to species and their habitats through integrated implementation of the Wildlife Action Plan, species recovery plans, conservation agreements and other management plans with the use of RADD Tool.
Potential for the proposed action to improve quality or quantity of sustainable uses such as grazing, timber harvest, biomass utilization, recreation, etc. Grazing improvements may include actions to improve forage availability and/or distribution of livestock.
Title Page
Project Details
Finance
Species
Habitats
Seed
Comments
Images/Documents
Completion Form
Project Summary Report