|

|
 |
|
NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
April 14, 2004
Contacts:
Erik Molvar, Biodiversity Conservation Alliance ·
(307) 742-7978
Erin Robertson, Center for Native Ecosystems ·
(303) 546-0214
Jim Catlin, Wild Utah Project · (801) 328-3550
Mark Salvo, American Lands Alliance · (503) 757-4221
Fish and Wildlife Service to Publish Positive Finding on Sage Grouse Endangered
Species Petition
Agency Cites "substantial biological information"
DENVER - The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has
announced that it will publish a positive "90-Day Finding" on
a petition to protect the greater sage grouse under the Endangered Species
Act. In this finding, the agency points to "substantial biological
information" indicating that the sage grouse may indeed deserve Endangered
Species Act protection.
"Our petition for listing included a massive analysis of the science
on sage grouse, and we're pleased that the Fish and Wildlife Service agrees
that this bird deserves a chance to be protected under the Endangered
Species Act," said Mark Salvo of American Lands Alliance. "Since
federal agencies under the Bush Administration refuse to implement meaningful
conservation measures, the Endangered Species Act may be the bird's last
best shot at survival."
The petition was submitted by a coalition of conservation groups concerned
about the continued decline of sage grouse populations. The degraded sagebrush
habitat, coupled with the radical increase in industrial projects, now
threaten the bird's continued survival.
"The sage grouse is an integral part of sagebrush country,"
said Jim Catlin of the Wild Utah Project. "Not only is it important
to hunters and wildlife watchers, but restoring sage grouse to their historic
populations is essential in order to recover the health and productivity
of the land and the communities that depend on it."
Large swaths of the sagebrush ecosystem where the sage grouse are making
their stand are the very places that are taking the brunt of oil and gas
drilling under the Bush Energy Policy in Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and
Montana.
"The sage grouse stands right in the path of the stampede to increase
oil and gas drilling across the West," said Erik Molvar, a wildlife
biologist for Biodiversity Conservation Alliance. "The federal agencies
could employ new technologies like directional drilling to produce oil
and gas while staying out of sensitive sage grouse habitats, but instead
the current policy is to plunk down roads and drilling pads right in the
middle of the most important nesting areas."
Local population declines may also be linked to overgrazing, invasion
of noxious weeds such as cheatgrass, and West Nile virus, a disease transmitted
by mosquitoes which has been linked to coalbed methane wastewater ponds
in the Powder River Basin. Sage grouse populations nationwide have declined
by 80 percent, and populations are already extinct in Arizona, British
Columbia, Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico and Oklahoma.
"The sage grouse is the 'canary in the coal mine' for sagebrush
habitats, telling us that this ecosystem is hurting," said Erin Robertson,
Staff Biologist for Center for Native Ecosystems. "By protecting
this bird, we're protecting both our western landscapes and other wildlife."
Now that the Fish and Wildlife Service has determined that there is sufficient
scientific evidence to warrant serious consideration of Endangered Species
listing, the agency will conduct an in-depth twelve-month "status
review" on its way to making a final determination on whether to
list the sage grouse.
# # #
|