| Planning | Form: (02A ) 400476615 6/14/2014 | • Minimize the number, size and distribution of well pads and locate pads along existing roads where possible.
• Adequately size infrastructure and facilities to accommodate both current and future gas production.
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| General Housekeeping | Form: (02A ) 400476615 6/14/2014 | • Continue to Support Operation Game Thief
• Continue to support CDOW sportsman’s programs
• Focus Ranch and Property Management (WPX owned/managed properties) on wildlife resources
• Restrict and/or manage grazing to benefit wildlife
• Enforce policies to protect wildlife (e.g., no poaching, no firearms, no dogs on location, no feeding of wildlife, etc.).
• Inventory, monitor and remove obsolete, degraded, or hazardous fencing on WPX owned property
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| Construction | Form: (02A ) 400476615 6/14/2014 | • Salvage topsoil from all road construction and other rights-of-way and re-apply during interim and final reclamation.
• Strip and segregate topsoil prior to construction. Appropriately configure topsoil piles and immediately seed to control erosion, prevent weed establishment and maintain soil microbial activity
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| Drilling/Completion Operations | Form: (02A ) 400476615 6/14/2014 | • Promptly report spills that affect wildlife to the CDOW.
• Store and stage emergency spill response equipment at strategic locations so that it is available to expedite effective spill response.
• Limit parking to already disturbed areas that have not yet been reclaimed
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| Interim Reclamation | Form: (02A ) 400476615 6/14/2014 | • Install automated emergency response systems (e.g., high tank alarms, emergency shut- down systems, etc.).
• Apply an aggressive, integrated, noxious and invasive weed management plan. Utilize an adaptive management strategy that permits effective responses to monitored findings and reflects local site and geologic conditions
• Map the occurrence of existing weed infestations prior to development to effectively monitor and target areas that will likely become issues after development.
• Evaluate the utility of soil amendment application or consider importing topsoil to achieve effective reclamation.
• Use locally adapted seed whenever available and approved by landowner.
• Use appropriately diverse reclamation seed mixes that mirror an appropriate reference area for the site being reclaimed where approved by landowner.
• Conduct seeding in a manner that ensures that seedbed preparation and planting techniques are targeted toward the varied needs of grasses, forbs and shrubs (e.g., seed forbs and shrubs separately from grasses, broadcast big sagebrush but drill grasses, etc.)
• Emphasize bunchgrass over sod-forming grasses in seed mixes in order to provide more effective wildlife cover and to facilitate forb and shrub establishment.
• Seed during appropriate season to increase likelihood of reclamation success
• Do not include aggressive, non-native grasses in reclamation seed mixes
• Choose reference areas as goals for reclamation that have high wildlife value, with attributes such a diverse and productive understory of vegetation, productive and palatable shrubs, and a high prevalence of native species.
• Establish vegetation with total perennial non-invasive plant cover of at least eighty (80) percent of pre-disturbance or reference area levels.
• Establish vegetation with plant diversity of non-invasive species which is at least half that of pre-disturbance or reference area levels. Quantify diversity of vegetation using a metric that considers only species with at least 3 percent relative plant cover.
• Establish permanent and monumented photo points and vegetation measurement plots or transects; monitor at least annually until plant cover, composition, and diversity standards have been met.
• Observe and maintain a performance standard for reclamation success characterized by the establishment of a self-sustaining, vigorous, diverse, locally appropriate plant community on the site, with a density sufficient to control erosion and non-native plant invasion and diversity sufficient to allow for normal plant community development.
• Use early and effective reclamation techniques, including interim reclamation to accelerate return of disturbed areas for use by wildlife
Remediate hydrocarbon spills on disturbed areas prior to reclamation.
• Complete final reclamation activities so that seeding occurs during the first optimal season following plugging and abandonment of oil and gas wells.
• Perform interim reclamation to final reclamation species composition and establishment standards.
• Perform interim reclamation on all disturbed areas not needed for active support of production operations
• Apply certified weed free mulch and crimp or tacify to remain in place to reclaim areas for seed preservation and moisture retention
• Control weeds in areas surrounding reclamation areas in order to reduce weed competition
• Educate employees and contractors about weed issues
• Where possible, fence livestock and/or wildlife out of newly reclaimed areas until reclamation standards have been met and plants are capable of sustaining herbivory
• Conduct necessary reclamation and invasive plant monitoring.
• Census and assess the utilization of the reclaimed areas by the target species
• Identify native species for which commercial seed sources are not available. Provide support to contractors for developing cultivation and seed production techniques for needed species
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