University of Oregon North Campus Conditional Use Permit Project <br />Riparian Assessment and Management Report <br /> <br />space to access migration corridors or to forage. Upland wildlife species documented in the field are listed in Table <br />3. <br />3.4Species Presence within PSA <br />MB&G conducted several queries for the potential presence of fish, wildlife, and plant species within the PSA prior <br />to the July 2017 field effort. In addition, MB&G recorded wildlife and plant species observed during the July 2017 <br />field effort. These species are documented below. <br />3.4.1Sensitive Aquatic Species <br />MB&G conducted a query of potential sensitive aquatic species present within the PSA. Table 1 describes the <br />sensitive species that have been historically present within the Willamette River, along with type of use, Federal <br />Endangered Species Act (ESA) listing status, and run timing (StreamNet 2012). Additional native and non-native <br />resident fish species are known to use the Willamette River and Millrace Slough within the PSA. <br />Table 1. Anadromous fish species distribution within the PSA (StreamNet, 2012). <br />Species RunPSA Use Type <br />Federal ESA Status <br />Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) Threatened SpringRearing and migration <br />Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) Threatened Fall Spawning and rearing <br />Steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss)Not listedSummer Migration only <br />Steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss)Not listedWinter Migration only <br />White sturgeon (Acipenser transmontanus) Not listedN/A Migration only <br />Western brook lamprey (Lampetra richardsoni)Not listedN/A Unknown <br />Species of ConcernSpawning, rearing, and <br />Pacific lamprey (Lampetra tridentate) N/A <br />migration* <br />* Pacific lamprey presence information provided by Bitty Roy, University of Oregon Biology Professor, February 14, 2018. <br />3.4.2Rare Species (ORBIC) <br />A data search from the Oregon Biodiversity Information Center (ORBIC) for the historic presence of rare species <br />within one mile of the PSA resulted in nine species (other than those listed through StreamNet, Table 1 above) <br />listed below in Table 2 (ORBIC 2017). <br />Table 2. Rare species historically documented within one mile of the PSA (ORBIC 2017). <br />Federal ESA <br />Scientific Name State ESA Status <br />Common Name <br />Status <br />Actinemys marmorata Western pond turtleSpecies of Concern Sensitive critical <br />Carex retrorsa Retrorse sedge N/AN/A <br />Chrysemys picta Painted turtleN/ASensitive critical <br />Corynorhinus townsendii Townsend's big-eared batSpecies of Concern Sensitive critical <br />Haliaeetus leucocephalus Bald eagle N/ASensitive vulnerable <br />Lomatium bradshawii Bradshaw's lomatiumEndangered Endangered <br />Oregonichthys crameri Oregon chub N/ASensitive critical <br />Salvelinus confluentus pop. 28 Bull trout (Coastal population) Threatened Sensitive critical/vulnerable <br /> <br />Two species presented in Table 2 are listed as threatened or endangered under the federal ESA. Bradshaw’s <br />lomatium, a small flowering plant, was recorded in a disturbed/maintained field less than one mile south of the <br />PSA in 2000, and bull trout presence within the Willamette River was derived from Oregon Department of Fish <br /> page 7 <br /> <br />