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4.7 BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES <br /> INTRODUCTION <br /> This supplemental biotic study was completed in response to the numerous comments received on the <br /> Buckeye Ranch Draft EIR and replaces the previous DEIR text. At the time the EIR was prepared, <br /> many of the plant and wildlife studies could not be undertaken due to scheduling of the EIR document. <br /> Additional surveys were then conducted during the late winter,spring and early summer months of 1992. <br /> This survey, coupled with the earlier effort, forms the basis of the impact analysis. Surveys were <br /> conducted over a 10-month period from mid-October 1991 to late August 1992. The latter survey <br /> spanned the time segment in Central California during which most major biotic events take place. This, <br /> coupled with the fact that the 1991-92 winter was the first in six years to produce a near normal rainfall <br /> after a severe drought cycle,created a set of environmental conditions which permitted the most complete <br /> biological evaluation of this area to date. Once the plant and wildlife value of the site could be <br /> determined, a more thorough analysis of the applicant's plan could be made. <br /> ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING <br /> Permanent Wetlands <br /> Tracy Lakes <br /> The most dominant biological feature of this area are the Tracy Lakes which occupy approximately 40 <br /> percent of the project site (Figure 4.7-1). These are the terminal drainage sink for Jahant Slough, and <br /> together both the north and south segments drain approximately 17.5 square miles (Kjeldsen-Sinnock& <br /> Associates, 1990). <br /> The lakes fill during winters of average or above average runoff periods. Like all seasonal wetlands, <br /> these "lakes" vary greatly over time as to the amount of water impounded on a given year. For the past <br /> five years of drought conditions in Central California, impoundments of water have been minimal (Lee, <br /> 1991). However, during the 1985-86 winter they were filled to a capacity equal to that of the adjacent <br /> Mokelumne River during that high rainfall season (Brovelli, 1991). <br /> From approximately 1940 to the mid-1980s the basins of the Tracy Lakes were farmed during the <br /> summer and early fall months by the Brovelli family. This was accomplished by draining the winter <br /> impoundment of water into the Mokelumne River in late spring and then discing and planting the fertile <br /> lake floors. For several years prior to this study the basins of the Tracy Lakes have not been farmed. <br /> However, they have been occasionally disced, and this has laid bare the soil for colonization by <br /> 4.7-1 <br />