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NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
October 9, 2008
Contact:
Mark Salvo, Director, Sagebrush
Sea Campaign, WildEarth Guardians · 503/757-4221
New Report Documents Extensive
Habitat Loss,
Lack of Protection for Interior West's Sagebrush Sea
Study shows wildlife icon, greater sage-grouse, is losing ground
PHOENIX - WildEarth Guardians released a report
today describing extensive habitat loss and degradation in sagebrush steppe
from livestock grazing, oil and gas development, and cheatgrass incursion,
leading to a steady decline in greater sage-grouse populations across the
West. More than 80 percent of the bird's remaining habitat is currently
affected by these three threats according to spatial analyses by the organization,
while less than three percent of the grouse's habitat is afforded some level
of federal protection.
The comprehensive report, entitled The
Shrinking Sagebrush Sea, is the first expansive geographic analysis
of significant threats to sagebrush steppe-one of the most endangered landscapes
in North America. The evaluation of sage-grouse habitat comes just months
before the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will decide whether to list the
grouse under the Endangered Species Act.
"Destructive oil and gas drilling, pervasive livestock grazing, weed
incursion and countless other impacts are draining the life out of the Sagebrush
Sea," said Mark Salvo, Director of the Sagebrush Sea Campaign for WildEarth
Guardians and author of the report. "Sage-grouse are suffering from
this mismanagement of sagebrush steppe."
WildEarth Guardians found that multiple land uses
and related factors, both individually and cumulatively, affect millions
of acres of sagebrush habitat on public and private lands in the Interior
West. Highlights of the report's findings include:
- Livestock grazing is permitted on 91 percent
of sage-grouse current range on federal public land, making it the most
ubiquitous use of sage-grouse habitat on federal public land.
- Natural gas and oil development is negative
for sage-grouse, especially in or proximate to breeding, nesting and
brooding habitat. Approximately 21.4 million acres, or thirteen percent,
of sage-grouse current range is within 3 km of permitted natural gas
and oil development. The percentage increases to 23 percent in Montana,
Wyoming, Utah and Colorado, where the majority of energy development
is occurring.
- Cheatgrass, a non-native, flammable weed, destroys
sagebrush steppe and is present in 36 percent of sage-grouse current
range.
The report also identified roads and increasing
wildfire as important threats to sagebrush steppe.
"We absolutely must stem the tide of
proliferating threats to the Sagebrush Sea by protecting sage-grouse under
the Endangered Species Act and expanding our system of sagebrush reserves,"
Salvo added.
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