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Measures should be taken to ensure that no pesticides, herbicides or other chemical agents <br /> enter the mitigation area. No spraying of these agents should be conducted within one hundred <br /> (100) feet of the area or if they have the potential to drift, flow or be washed into the area in <br /> opinion of biologists or law enforcement personnel from the California Department of Fish and <br /> Game or the Service. The Service should be provided with written documentation that this <br /> condition will be carried out in perpetuity. <br /> No dumping of trash or other material should occur within the mitigation area. Any trash or <br /> other material should be removed within ten (10) working days of discovery. The Service <br /> should be provided with written documentation that this condition will be carried out in <br /> perpetuity. <br /> Biologists and law enforcement personnel from the California Department of Fish and Game <br /> and the Service should be given complete access to the project site to monitor transplanting <br /> activities. Personnel from both these agencies should be given complete access to the project <br /> and the mitigation area to monitor the valley elderberry longhorn beetle and its elderberry <br /> habitat in perpetuity. <br /> Permanent fencing should be placed completely around the mitigation area to prevent <br /> unauthorized entry by off-road vehicles, equestrians or other parties that may damage or <br /> destroy the habitat of the beetle. The applicant should receive written approval from the <br /> Service that the fencing is acceptable prior to initiation of the mitigation program. <br /> A minimum of two prominent signs should be placed and maintained in perpetuity at the <br /> mitigation area noting that the site is habitat for the federally threatened valley elderberry <br /> longhorn beetle and including information on the beetle's biology and ecology. The signs <br /> 8 <br />