New Mexico Register / Volume XXXIV, Issue 8 / April 25, 2023
This is an amendment to 19.21.2
NMAC, adding new Sections 10, 11, 16, 18 and 20 and amending Sections 7, 9, 12,
13, 15, 17, and 19, effective 04/25/2023.
19.21.2.7 DEFINITIONS:
A. “Agricultural
practice” means grazing and
grazing management practices such as feeding, herding or gathering; ditch
clearing or burning; planting; applying herbicides to cultivated fields;
harvesting; mowing of hay fields or pastures; burning pastures or fields or
cultivating, plowing or disking fields or similar activities; road maintenance;
and the maintenance, repair or replacement of fences, dirt tanks (earthen
impoundments), water tanks and troughs, wells and windmills, pumps or solar
panels powering wells, loading chutes, corrals, erosion control structures and
water pipelines.
B. “Applicant” means the person applying for a permit required by 19.21.2
NMAC to take endangered plants for scientific study, propagation or collection
of voucher specimens or to take an endangered plant(s) where taking is
incidental and not the purpose of carrying out an otherwise lawful
activity. If a governmental entity is
issuing a permit, lease, license, authorization, right-of-way, easement or
similar document that allows a person to conduct the lawful activity (drilling,
fence installation, pipeline construction, etc.), the applicant for an
incidental take permit shall be the person conducting the lawful activity not
the governmental entity.
[A.]
C. “Department” means the energy, minerals and natural
resources department.
D. “Endangered
plant” means a plant that is a member of the species listed in 19.21.2.9
NMAC.
E. “Harm”
means direct physical injury or damage to a plant that results in reduced
viability of the plant, including reproductive potential and future health and
growth.
F. “Permittee”
means the person issued a permit by the state forester or a person required to
have a permit pursuant to 19.21.2 NMAC.
The permittee shall be the person responsible for the scientific study,
propagation or collection of voucher specimens of endangered plants or the
person undertaking a lawful activity where taking of
an endangered plant(s) is incidental and not the purpose of carrying out the
otherwise lawful activity. If a
governmental entity is issuing a permit, lease, license, authorization,
right-of-way, easement or similar document that allows a person to conduct the
lawful activity (drilling, fence installation, pipeline construction, etc.),
the permittee for an incidental take permit shall be the person conducting the
lawful activity not the governmental entity.
G. “Person”
means an individual or entity including partnerships, corporations, associations
or joint ventures and its officers, agents or employees; the state or a
political subdivision of the state and its officers, agents or employees; or an
agency, department or instrumentality of the United States and its officers,
agents or employees.
[B.] H. “Population site” means an area of
occurrence of a particular species.
[C.] I. “Specimen” means the physical parts or
a plant in its entirety taken from a population site for the purpose of
scientific study.
[D.]
J. “State forester” means the director of the department’s forestry
division and the department secretary’s designated representative for the
purposes of administering the department’s authorities and responsibilities
under Section 75-6-1 NMSA 1978 including endangered plant investigations and
issuance of [collection and transplantation] scientific study,
propagation, collection of voucher specimen or incidental take permits.
[E.] K. “Taking” means [the removal, with the
intent to] to remove, harm, kill, destroy, possess, transport,
export, sell, or offer for sale any of the plants, or parts thereof,
listed in 19.21.2.9 NMAC, from the places in the state of New Mexico where they
naturally grow including federally owned land, private land, state owned
land or land owned by political subdivisions of the state, but not tribal trust
or restricted fee land or individual trust allotments. Taking does not include the
(1) incidental removal, harm, killing or destruction of
endangered plants resulting from agricultural practices; or
(2) removal, harm, killing, destruction, possession or
transport of endangered plants by tribal members for religious purposes.
L. “Tribal
member” means a member of an Indian nation, tribe or pueblo.
[F.] M. “Voucher specimen” means an identifiable
and representative specimen taken by a botanical collector from a population
site for the purpose of documenting that site as occupied habitat. It shall be accompanied by pertinent
information on location, habitat, collector, date taken and any other notes the
collector can present concerning the population site.
[10/29/1985, 12/23/1991, 8/31/1995; 19.21.2.7 NMAC - Rn & A, 19 NMAC 21.2.7, 11/30/2006; A, 07/28/2020; A, 04/25/2023]
19.21.2.9 LIST OF NEW MEXICO STATE
ENDANGERED PLANT SPECIES: The following list of plants constitutes the
New Mexico state endangered plant species list.
Listed are the plant's scientific name, its common name and the
criterion for inclusion by the subsection in 19.21.2.8 NMAC:
Agalinis calycina (Leoncita false-foxglove) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Aliciella formosa (Aztec gilia) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Allium gooddingii
(Goodding’s onion) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Amsonia tharpii
(Tharp's bluestar) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Argemone pinnatisecta
(Sacramento prickly-poppy) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Asplenium scolopendrium var. americanum (American Hart's-tongue fern) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8
NMAC |
Astragalus humillimus
(Mancos milkvetch) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Peniocereus greggii (night-blooming
cereus) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Castilleja ornata
(Swale paintbrush) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Castilleja tomentosa (Tomentose
paintbrush) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Cirsium vinaceum
(Sacramento Mountains thistle) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Cirsium wrightii
(Wright’s marsh thistle) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Cleome multicaulis
(slender spiderflower) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Coryphantha robustispina ssp. scheeri (Scheer’s pincushion cactus) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Cylindropuntia viridiflora (Santa Fe cholla) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Cymopterus spellenbergii (Spellenberg’s springparsley) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Cypripedium parviflorum var. pubescens (golden lady's slipper) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Echinocereus fendleri var. kuenzleri (Kuenzler's hedgehog cactus) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Erigeron hessii
(Hess' fleabane) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Erigeron rhizomatus
(Zuni fleabane) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Eriogonum gypsophilum (gypsum wild
buckwheat) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Escobaria duncanii (Duncan's pincushion
cactus) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Escobaria organensis (Organ Mountain
pincushion cactus) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Escobaria sneedii var. leei (Lee's pincushion cactus) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Escobaria sneedii var. sneedii (Sneed's pincushion cactus) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Escobaria villardii (Villard's
pincushion cactus) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Hedeoma todsenii (Todsen's
pennyroyal) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Helianthus paradoxus (Pecos
sunflower) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Hexalectris colemanii (Coleman’s
coralroot) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Hexalectris nitida (shining coralroot) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Hexalectris arizonica (crested coralroot) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Ipomopsis sancti-spiritus (Holy Ghost ipomopsis) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Lepidospartum burgessii (gypsum scalebroom) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Lilium philadelphicum
(wood lily) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Linum allredii (Allred’s flax) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Opuntia arenaria (sand prickly
pear) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Pediocactus knowltonii (Knowlton's cactus) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Pediomelum pentaphyllum (Chihuahua scurfpea) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Penstemon metcalfei
(Metcalfe’s beardtongue) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Polygala rimulicola
var. mescalerorum (San Andres milkwort) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Puccinellia parishii (Parish's alkali
grass) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Sclerocactus cloverae (Clover’s cactus) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Sclerocactus mesae-verdae (Mesa Verde
cactus) |
Subsection A of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Scrophularia macrantha (Mimbres
figwort) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Spiranthes magnicamporum (lady tresses
orchid) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
Townsendia gypsophila (gypsum Townsend’s aster) |
Subsection B of 19.21.2.8 NMAC |
[10/29/1985, 12/23/1991,
8/31/1995; 19.21.2.9 NMAC - Rn & A, 19 NMAC 21.2.9, 11/30/2006; A,
01/15/2019; A, 07/28/2020; A, 04/25/2023]
19.21.2.10 PROTECTION:
The taking of endangered plants, other
than pursuant to a permit issued by the state forester, is prohibited.
[19.21.2.10 NMAC – N, 04/25/2023]
19.21.2.11 INCIDENTAL TAKE PERMIT: The state forester
may issue, issue with conditions or deny requests for an incidental take permit
to allow a permittee to take endangered plants so long as taking is incidental
to and not the purpose of carrying out an otherwise lawful activity. Such requests shall be subject to the
following requirements.
A. The
state forester may issue an incidental take permit only if the applicant
submits a completed application on a form designated by the state forester that
contains the following:
(1) the impact
on the species that will likely result from the taking including the number of
endangered plants to be taken;
(2) information and analysis that
establishes that such taking will not appreciably reduce the likelihood of the
survival and recovery of the species in the wild including range wide and local
species status, number of endangered plants in the activity area, number of
endangered plants in the activity area taken, number of endangered plants in
the activity area avoided, direct and indirect effects on the species and
population resulting from the activity, disturbance frequency and intensity,
cumulative effects resulting from the activity and interrelated effects
affecting the species’ survival and any supporting documentation;
(3) the best management practices and
mitigation activities the applicant will use to avoid, minimize and mitigate
the impacts to the species from such a taking during the implementation of the
proposed activity (e.g., fencing off areas with endangered plants during
construction period, saving topsoil layer and returning to site after
construction, dust mitigation, seed collection, adjusting or reducing project
footprint, biological monitoring on site during construction); and
(4) signed commitment that applicant will implement the best
management practices and mitigation activities and submit a written report upon
completion of the practices and activities.
B. An application must also include
(1) the applicant’s name, address, phone number, email address
and, if applicable, name and title of the applicant’s authorized
representative;
(2) the location of the proposed activity with a map, location
coordinates (if available) and size (acreage) of proposed activity;
(3) description of the proposed activity;
(4) property ownership; and
(5) a signed certification by the applicant that states that
the applicant assumes complete responsibility for any resulting impacts on endangered
plants or the occupied habitat of such plants caused by the activity.
C. An
incidental take permit application for an endangered plant also listed under
federal law must be accompanied by United States department of the interior,
fish and wildlife service consultation response or biological opinion if
federal law requires the response or biological opinion.
D. The
state forester may authorize or require transplantation of endangered plants as
a condition of an incidental take permit if the applicant demonstrates the need
for transplantation or the state forester otherwise determines it is
necessary. Where transplantation is
proposed, in addition to the information required by Subsection A of 19.21.2.11
NMAC, the applicant shall:
(1) explain the need for transplantation;
(2) identify the number of plants to be transplanted;
(3) explain the transplantation method/protocol to be
employed;
(4) identify the site to which the plants will be taken for
transplantation and describe the long-term protections provided at the site;
(5) identify the timeline for the
proposed transplantation;
(6) describe the monitoring plan for transplantation; and
(7) include the name and qualifications of the person carrying
out the transplantation.
E. If
the state forester denies an application for an incidental take permit or
issues an incidental take permit with conditions, the state forester shall
provide the reasons for the denial or conditions in writing.
F. A
permittee may not transfer an incidental take permit without the state
forester’s written approval.
G. The
state forester’s issuance of an incidental permit is not authorization to
conduct the proposed activity; the incidental take permit only authorizes the
incidental take. If the permittee does
not own the land where the activity will occur, the permittee shall also
possess or obtain the landowner’s authorization for the incidental take if the
landowner requires. A permittee shall
comply with other applicable federal, state or local laws; possess or obtain
permits, licenses or other authorizations other entities require; and if not
the owner of the land where the activity will occur, possess or obtain the
landowner’s authorization to conduct the activity or use
the land for the activity.
H. The
division does not require a person conducting an activity to survey to determine the existence of endangered plant(s), but this
does not relieve the applicant to conduct surveys that may be required by
federal, other state or local agencies.
I. Emergency
response. The following are exempt from
the requirement to obtain an incidental take permit: law enforcement or emergency responses or
other federal, state or local agency civil actions, whether or not undertaken
by or in coordination with the division, that are necessary to prevent or
respond to immediate threats to public health, safety or environment, including
firefighting and flood management or controlling, containing and capturing
releases of hazardous or harmful materials.
If the division is not involved in the emergency response, it should be
notified of the response as soon as practicable. Any known endangered plant(s) within the area
of emergency response should be monitored to the extent practicable so that any
adverse effects can be avoided or mitigated.
[19.21.2.11 NMAC – N, 04/25/2023]
[19.21.2.10 PERMITS:] 19.21.2.12 PERMITS FOR SCIENTIFIC STUDY OR PROPAGATION:
A. [The
state forester may issue permits to take state endangered plant species for the
purpose of conducting scientific studies that enhance understanding for the
distribution of, or conditions required for survival of, endangered plant
species; or for propagation or transplantation activities that will enhance the
survival of endangered plant species. ] The state forester may also
issue permits to take specimens for the purpose of conducting scientific
studies that enhance understanding of the distribution of an endangered plant
species, or will generate new knowledge in the genetic, anatomical, chemical,
morphological, life history or in other relevant areas of research enhancing
the understanding of the conditions required for survival of an endangered
plant species; or for propagation activities that will enhance the survival of
endangered plant species. If the state
forester denies an application for a permit or issues a permit with conditions,
the state forester shall provide the reasons for the denial or conditions in
writing.
B. [The
state forester shall only issue permits to individuals. No one person may operate under the authority
of another's permit.] The state forester may deny applications for
scientific study or propagation permits in locations where endangered plant
survival is especially precarious.
C. Each
person applying for a scientific study or propagation permit must
demonstrate sufficient expertise to carry out the permitted activities in a
competent manner. The following
information may be used to support the request for a permit: education in botany or related area, field
experience, collection numbers, accessions into a recognized herbarium,
publications and recommendations from recognized authorities.
D. The
permittee's or permittee’s representative’s signature on the permit
acknowledges willingness to comply with all applicable laws, rules or
regulations and permit conditions.
E. [The
permittee shall carry a copy of the permit at all times during the collection
and transportation of endangered species.
F. A permit does not authorize the
permittee to take federally threatened or endangered plants. Taking of these species also requires a
federal permit issued by the U.S. fish and wildlife service.
G. A permit does not extend to the
permittee the privilege to trespass or enter on lands without the owner’s
permission. The permittee should contact
the appropriate management agency or landowner before beginning studies or
taking specimens on federal, state or private lands.
H.] A state
permit to take [, propagate or transplant the endangered plant species
listed in 19.21.2.9 NMAC] endangered plants for scientific study or
propagation is not required for federal employees working within the lands
of their jurisdiction, nor for activities [within tribal reservations] on
tribal trust or restricted fee lands or individual trust allotments.
F. A
permittee may not transfer a scientific study or propagation permit without the
state forester’s written approval.
[19.21.2.12 NMAC – Rn & A, 19.21.2.10 NMAC, 04/25/2023]
[19.21.2.11 SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS:] 19.21.2.13 GENERAL PROVISIONS FOR SCIENTIFIC
STUDY OR PROPAGATION:
[ A. The state forester may issue a permit
to take endangered plants for scientific studies if the studies will generate
new knowledge in the genetic, anatomical, chemical, morphological, life history
or in other relevant areas of research enhancing the understanding of the
conditions required for the survival of the endangered species.
B. Known population sites will be
provided with the permit when the permittee requires them for the permitted
study. The permit will contain any
special parameters for the taking.
C. If a permittee takes any specimens the permittee shall deposit at least one voucher
specimen at either the university of New Mexico herbarium or New Mexico state
university herbarium.
D. When possible, the
investigator shall take specimens in such a way as to not reduce the population
(e.g. take a single stem from an herbaceous perennial, leaving the root intact,
or other methods appropriate to the particular species).
E. The state forester may prohibit
taking in known locations where survival is especially precarious.]
A. When
a permittee takes specimens pursuant to a scientific study permit, the
permittee shall deposit at least one voucher specimen at either the university
of New Mexico herbarium or New Mexico state university herbarium. When possible, the permittee shall take
specimens in such a way as to not reduce the population (e.g., take a single
stem from an herbaceous perennial, leaving the root intact, or other methods
appropriate to the particular species).
B. The permittee or permittee’s
representative shall carry a copy of the scientific study or propagation permit
at all times during the collection and transportation of endangered plants.
C. A scientific study or propagation
permit for an endangered plant that is also listed under federal law must be
accompanied by the United States department of the interior, fish and wildlife
service recovery permit.
D. A scientific study or propagation
permit does not extend to the permittee the privilege to trespass or enter on
lands without the owner’s permission.
The permittee should contact the appropriate management agency or
landowner before beginning studies or taking specimens on lands the permittee
does not own or manage.
[19.21.2.13
NMAC – Rn & A, 19.21.2.11 NMAC, 04/25/2023]
[19.21.2.12] 19.21.2.14 VOUCHER SPECIMENS:
A. The
state forester may issue a permit to take endangered plant voucher specimens
during botanical inventories and environmental surveys for the purposes of
species verification and documentation of population sites.
B. Taking
specimens for the sole purpose of exchange with other herbaria is prohibited.
C. The
collection of voucher specimens shall make no long-term detrimental effect on
the population. The permittee may take a
maximum of three specimens, if the population is sufficient. If the population is very small and the
taking of a single individual is detrimental, then the state forester may
condition the permit so that the permittee may take only a fragment of an
individual for voucher purposes.
D. The
permittee shall deposit at least one specimen of the three taken from each
locality at the university of New Mexico herbarium or New Mexico state
university herbarium. The permittee may
send duplicates to the western New Mexico university herbarium, government
agency collections within New Mexico or herbaria in other states that are
formally listed in index herbariorum. The label affixed to each specimen shall
contain information on collection location, description of the habitat,
collector's name, date of collection and estimated size of the population.
E. To
assist in the identification and preservation of endangered plant species in
New Mexico, permittees shall report all permitted collections of voucher
specimens to the state forester by December 31 of each year. The report shall contain the voucher specimen
label information and the place or places of deposition of specimens.
[19.21.2.14 NMAC – Rn, 19.21.2.12
NMAC, 04/25/2023]
[19.21.2.13 PROPAGATION AND TRANSPLANTATION:]
19.21.2.15 PERMIT APPROVAL:
[A. The state forester may issue a permit to take endangered
plants to propagate or transplant when evidence is presented that the activity
will enhance that species’ survival capability.
B. The state forester may issue a
permit to transplant endangered species (not including federally listed taxa)
when such species occur on areas of land use conversion.
C. The state forester may issue a
permit for transplantation upon approval of a proposal the applicant submits
outlining the need for such transplantation, the method to be employed, the
site to which the plants will be taken for transplantation and the
qualifications of the person carrying out the transplantation.]
The state forester shall only
issue a permit if the application meets the applicable requirements in
19.21.2.11, 19.21.2.12, 19.21.2.13 or 19.21.2.14 NMAC for approval of an
incidental take permit, scientific study, propagation or collection of voucher
specimen permit. The state forester may
not approve an application for a permit if an applicant (a) has taken an
endangered plant outside the scope of a prior permit’s provisions or without a
permit, (b) otherwise failed to comply with a prior permit, (c) provided false
information on a permit application or (d) attempted to transfer a prior permit
without the state forester’s written approval or allow someone else to use a
prior permit.
[19.21.2.15 NMAC – Rn & A, 19.21.2.13 NMAC, 04/25/2023]
19.21.2.16 PERMIT
AMENDMENT: A permittee shall submit
a written application to the state forester to request an amendment to a
permit. The application shall describe
the amendment requested and explain why the amendment is needed.
[19.21.2.16 NMAC – N, 04/25/2023]
[19.21.2.14] 19.21.2.17 PERMIT REVOCATION: [Prohibited activities that render a collection permit
invalid and may subject the permittee to prosecution include:]
A. The
state forester may revoke a permit for actions or events including taking of [specimens of endangered plant species] endangered
plants outside the scope of the permit’s provisions or without a permit,
failure to comply with the permit, discovery that any of the reasons that would
have resulted in the state forester not approving a permit application exist,
failure to deposit a voucher specimen in a designated New Mexico herbarium as
required by Subsection A of 19.21.2.13 NMAC for a scientific study permit or by
Subsection D of 19.21.2.14 NMAC for voucher specimen permits, taking
specimens under a permit for commercial use, providing false information on the
permit application, attempting to transfer the permit without the state
forester’s prior written approval or allowing someone else to use the
permit.
B. The
state forester shall provide 30 days’ prior written notice of the permit
revocation to the permittee unless such notice will result in long-term
detrimental effect on the endangered plant population’s survival. If such notice will result in long-term
detrimental effect on the endangered plant population’s survival, the state
forester shall provide at least 48 hours written notice.
[19.21.2.17 NMAC – Rn & A,
19.21.2.14 NMAC, 04/25/2023]
19.21.2.18 PERMIT TERM: The permit term
shall be for the scope of the activity or five years, whichever is less. If the activity is not completed within five
years, the permittee shall apply for a new permit. The scope of the activity does not include
subsequent maintenance, repair or replacement, which are considered separate
activities.
[19.21.2.18 NMAC – N, 04/25/2023]
[19.21.2.15 PROTECTION AND PENALTIES:] 19.21.2.19 PENALTIES:
A. [The
taking, possession, transportation, exportation from the state, processing,
sale or offer for sale or shipment within the state of plants listed in
19.21.2.9 NMAC, other than pursuant to a valid permit issued by the state
forester, is prohibited.
B.] Pursuant to Section 75-6-1 NMSA
1978, violation of 19.21.2 NMAC is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not
less than $300, nor more than $1,000 or imprisonment for a term of not more
than 120 days or both. Each
individual endangered plant taken without a valid permit issued by the state
forester is a violation of 19.21.2.10 NMAC; each individual incidence or
occurrence is a violation of other provisions in 19.21.2 NMAC (e.g., failing to
obtain a required permit, providing false information on a permit application,
failing to comply with a permit condition).
[C.] B. Any law enforcement officer may seize any endangered
plants taken, possessed, transported, exported, processed, sold or offered for
sale or shipped in violation of 19.21.2 NMAC.
[19.21.2.19 NMAC – Rn & A, 19.21.2.15, 04/25/2023]
19.21.2.20 TRANSITION: The prohibition on removing, harming, killing or destroying endangered plants without a permit issued by the state forester shall not apply to ground-disturbing activities for which a person received a permit or similar authorization from a federal, state or local government agency prior to April 25, 2023 so long as the ground disturbance commences by October 22, 2023.
[19.21.2.20 NMAC – N, 04/25/2023]