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City of Redwood City, Public Works Division Initial Study & Mitigated Negative Declaration <br />Document Date: October 15, 2015 <br />Revision Date: January 25, 2016 Page 21 Blankinship & Associates, Inc. <br /> <br />Common Name Scientific <br />Name Status Habitat <br />Habitat is not <br />Present in <br />Project Area; <br />Species <br />Eliminated <br />from Further <br />Consideration <br />Habitat is Present in <br />Project Area; <br />Species Eliminated <br />from Further <br />Consideration for <br />Reasons Given (see <br />numbered notes) <br />Potential <br />Risk is <br />Present <br />from <br />Project <br />Activities <br />INVERTEBRATE <br />Conservancy fairy <br />shrimp <br />Branchinecta <br />conservatio FE Vernal pools X <br />vernal pool fairy <br />shrimp <br />Branchinecta <br />lynchi FT Vernal pools X <br />San Bruno elfin <br />butterfly <br />Callophrys mossii <br />bayensis FE <br />Coastal, mountainous <br />areas with grassy <br />ground cover <br />X <br />Bay checkerspot <br />butterfly <br />Euphydryas <br />editha bayensis FT <br />Native grasslands on <br />outcrops of serpentine <br />soil. Primary host is <br />Plantago erecta. <br />Secondary hosts are <br />Orthocarpus densiflorus <br />and O. purpurscens. <br />X <br />vernal pool <br />tadpole shrimp <br />Lepidurus <br />packardi FE Vernal pools X <br />Mission blue <br />butterfly <br />Plebejus <br />icarioides <br />missionensis <br />FE <br />Grasslands and areas <br />inhabitated by its three <br />larval host plants: <br />Lupinus albifrons, L. <br />variicolor, and L. <br />formosus <br />X <br />callippe silverspot <br />butterfly <br />Speyeria callippe <br />callippe FE <br />Northern coastal scrub <br />of the San Francisco <br />Peninsula <br />X <br />Myrtle's silverspot <br />butterfly <br />Speyeria zerene <br />myrtleae FE <br />Foggy, coastal dunes <br />and hills of the Point <br />Reyes Peninsula, <br />extirpated from coastal <br />San Mateo County <br />X <br />MAMMAL <br />pallid bat Antrozous <br />pallidus SCSC <br />Deserts, grasslands, <br />shurblands, woodlands <br />& forests. Most <br />common in open, dry <br />habitats with rocky <br />areas for roosting <br />X <br />Townsend's big- <br />eared bat <br />Corynorhinus <br />townsendii SCSC <br />Mesic habitats, roosts in <br />the open, hanging from <br />walls and ceilings X (1) <br />western mastiff bat Eumops perotis <br />californicus SCSC <br />Semi-arid to arid <br />habitats including <br />confier and deciduous <br />woodlands, coastal <br />scrub, grasslands, & <br />chaparral. Roosts in <br />crevices in cliff faces, <br />high buildings, trees, <br />and tunnels <br /> X (1) <br />western red bat Lasiurus <br />blossevillii SCSC <br />Along riparian and <br />agricultural areas in <br />broadleaf tree <br />communities throughout <br />the Central Valley <br /> X (1) <br />San Francisco <br />dusky-footed <br />woodrat <br />Neotoma <br />fuscipes <br />annectens <br />SCSC <br />Forest habitats of <br />moderate canopy & <br />moderate to dense <br />understory, may prefer <br />chapparal & redwood <br />habitats <br />X <br />6.3.A. - Page 29