31 Tex. Admin. Code § 69.22 - Wildlife - Recovery Values
(a) Each
species of bird, reptile, amphibian, or animal shall be assigned a score of 0-3
for each of eight scoring criteria. The sum of the scores for the eight
criteria (subsection (b) of this section) shall be multiplied by a weighting
factor (subsection (c) of this section), and the resulting adjusted criteria
score is compared to the monetary scale (subsection (d) of this section) to
obtain a monetary value.
(b) For
scoring criteria listed in paragraphs (1)-(8) of this subsection, a species
which is not sought at all shall be scored as 0, while a highly sought species
shall be scored 3.
(1) Recreation. The extent
to which a species is actively sought by users with wildlife interests. Scoring
considers both harvest and nonharvest use of a species.
(2) Aesthetic. The social value of wildlife
species. These values represent wildlife species' beauty or unique natural
history. Aesthetic values for these species exist whether or not a person ever
would encounter one in its natural habitat.
(3) Educational. The educational value of a
species arising from, for example, published materials and other audio-visual
media about the species, displays in zoos, or the relative frequency with which
the species is used to exemplify important curricula principles.
(4) Scarcity. The relative population of a
species within the range of its habitat, from abundant to scarce.
(5) Environmental Tolerance. The ability of a
species to tolerate normal changes in climate, topography, water regimes or
other ecological factors which may limit range and population.
(6) Economics. The direct or indirect
economic benefit attributable to the species as a result of recreational or
legal transactions.
(7)
Recruitment. Reproductive and survival potential of a species as it relates to
the capability for replacement of its population following decrease or
loss.
(8) Ecological role. A
species' relationships with other life forms--and the species contribution to a
healthful and stable balance of nature. Widely-consumed forage species score
high, as do predators which control prey species populations. Forage species
that are not widely consumed score low, as do predators which contribute little
to regulation of prey populations.
(c) The individual scores for the criteria
are summed to derive a total criteria score. The total criteria score is
multiplied by a weighting factor which adjusts the summed criteria score for
variance in public demand and/or perception of value for a species. The
weighting factor relates the overall demand for a species to its existing
supply and to future opportunity for public use. The weighting factors are:
(1) 1.0--Abundant. No additional public
demand or perception of value exists beyond that reflected by the eight
criteria in subsection (b) of this section;
(2) 1.1--Frequent. Minor disparity exists
between resource availability and public interest and the public demand
fluctuates periodically around an equilibrium point;
(3) 1.3--Rare. Substantial disparity exists
between available supply and identified public interest in species that are
subject to ongoing management programs;
(4) 1.5--Scarce. The species populations are
never expected to meet identified demands or needs, or management programs for
a limited species are not fully developed with respect to planned recreational
opportunity and economic contribution.
(d) The total criteria score multiplied by
the weighting factor in subsections (a)-(c) of this section, provides an
adjusted criteria score and corresponding recovery value for each species.
Notes
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