Roseburg Record of
Decision and Resource Management Plan
Acronyms and Abbreviations
Glossary
Roseburg Record of Decision
Roseburg District Resource
Management Plan Table of Contents:
- Tables
- Maps
- Appendices
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Management Actions/Direction for
All Land Use Allocations and Resource Programs
All management actions/direction in this Resource
Management Plan are subject to refinement through
planning based on watershed analysis and the adaptive
management process. In some areas, land use allocations
overlap. A hierarchy of allocations and related
management actions/direction will be used to guide plan
implementation (see Attachment A of the SEIS ROD,
Hierarchy of Standards and Guidelines).
Implement the survey and manage provision of the SEIS
ROD within the range of SEIS special attention species
and the particular habitats that they are known to
occupy. Table H-1 of Appendix H shows
which species are covered by this provision, and which of
the following four categories and management
actions/direction are to be applied to each:
| 1. |
Manage known sites
(highest priority). |
| |
a. |
Acquire and manage information
on known sites, make it available to all project
planners, and use it to design or modify
activities. |
| |
b. |
Protect known sites. For some
species, apply specific management treatments
such as prescribed fire. |
| |
c. |
For rare and endemic fungus
species, temporarily withdraw 160 acres around
known sites from ground disturbing activities
until the sites can be thoroughly surveyed and
site specific measures prescribed. |
| |
d. |
Establish management areas of
all useable habitat up to 600 acres around two
currently unprotected locations of Oxiporous
nobilissimus. Protect these populations until the
sites can be thoroughly surveyed and site
specific measures prescribed. Protection will be
undertaken immediately. |
| 2. |
Survey prior to
activities and manage sites. |
| |
a. |
Continue existing efforts to
survey and manage rare and sensitive species
habitat. |
| |
b. |
For species without survey
protocols, start immediately to design protocols
and implement surveys. |
| |
c. |
Within the known or suspected
ranges and within the habitat types of vegetation
communities associated with the species, survey
for Del Norte, Larch Mountain, Shasta, Siskiyou
Mountains, and Van Dyke's salamanders, red tree
voles, and Lynx. These surveys will precede the
design of all ground disturbing activities that
will be implemented in 1997 or later.
|
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d. |
For the other species listed in
Table H-1 of Appendix H,
begin development of survey protocols in 1994 and
proceed with surveys as soon as possible. These
surveys will be completed prior to ground
disturbing activities that will be implemented in
Fiscal Year 1999 or later. Work to establish
habitat requirements and survey protocols may be
prioritized relative to the estimated threats to
the species as reflected in the SEIS. |
| |
e. |
Conduct surveys at a scale most
appropriate to the species. |
| |
f. |
Develop management
actions/direction to manage habitat for the
species on sites where they are located. |
| |
g. |
Incorporate survey protocols and
proposed site management in interagency
conservation strategies developed as part of
ongoing planning efforts coordinated by the
Regional Ecosystem Office. |
| 3. |
Conduct extensive
surveys and manage sites. |
| |
a. |
Conduct extensive surveys for
the species to find high priority sites for
species management. Specific surveys prior to
ground disturbing activities are not a
requirement. |
| |
b. |
Conduct surveys according to a
schedule that is most efficient and identify
sites for protection at that time. |
| |
c. |
Design these surveys for
efficiency and develop standardized protocols. |
| |
d. |
Begin these surveys by 1996. |
| 4. |
Conduct general
regional surveys. |
| |
a. |
Survey to acquire additional
information and to determine necessary levels of
protection for arthropods, fungi species that
were not classed as rare and endemic, bryophytes,
and lichens. |
| |
b. |
Initiate these surveys no later
than Fiscal Year 1996 and complete them within
ten years. |
Provide protection buffers for specific rare and
locally endemic species and other species in the upland
forest matrix. A list of these species and related
management actions/direction are presented in Appendix H, Table H-2 and the section on Special Status and SEIS Special
Attention Species. These species are likely to be
assured viability if they occur within reserves. However,
there might be occupied locations outside reserves that
will be important to protect as well.
Apply the following management actions/direction:
- Develop survey protocols that will ensure a high
likelihood of locating sites occupied by these
species.
- Following development of survey protocols and
prior to ground disturbing activities, conduct
surveys within the known or suspected ranges of
the species and within the habitat types or
vegetation communities occupied by the species.
See the previous Survey and Manage section for an
implementation schedule.
- When located, protect the occupied sites.
See Special Status and
SEIS Special Attention Species section for additional
details.

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