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NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
November 24, 2010
Contact:
Mark Salvo, Coordinator, Western
Grouse Project, WildEarth Guardians · 503-757-4221
Presidential Pardon Requested for Endangered Western Grouse
Obama Administration Determined Three More
Grouse Warranted Listing in 2010
SANTA FE, N.M. - WildEarth Guardians today
requested that President
Obama "pardon" endangered grouse in the American West by granting
them protection under the Endangered Species Act. The request comes on the
cusp of the President's traditional pardon of two Thanksgiving turkeys.
"The compassion that marks the Presidential Pardon of the Thanksgiving
turkeys should be extended to the imperiled wild grouse of the West, many
of which are suffering greatly from mismanagement of their habitat on public
lands," said Mark Salvo, Coordinator for the Western Grouse Project
for WildEarth Guardians.
The organization urged President Obama to marry the 46-year tradition of
the Presidential Pardon for Thanksgiving turkeys with the 36-year tradition
of the Endangered Species Act providing a vital safety net for fish, wildlife
and plants threatened with extinction. This year the Obama Administration
determined that three more grouse-the greater sage-grouse, Mono Basin sage-grouse,
and Gunnison sage-grouse-need protection under the ESA, and would be listed
if not for other priorities. These grouse join a fourth grouse, the lesser
prairie-chicken, as candidates for listing under the ESA. WildEarth Guardians
also advocates listing Columbian sharp-tailed grouse under the act.
"The best available science, as interpreted by this administration,
supports protecting endangered grouse," said Salvo. "Their recovery
will depend on listing, as well as new policies to protect and restore their
habitat."
The letter notes that 86 percent of Americans support protecting species
under the Endangered Species Act and that protecting western grouse will
help conserve natural landscapes that benefit both grouse and human communities.
Five western grouse are imperiled. Four are candidates for listing under
the Endangered Species Act.
- Greater sage-grouse (candidate species) are
the iconic ambassador of the Sagebrush Sea. Although the species still
occurs in eleven western states, their distribution has decreased by
almost half, while rangewide abundance has been reduced by as much as
97 percent from historic levels.
- Gunnison sage-grouse (candidate species), a
distinct species from greater sage-grouse, occur in eight small populations
in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah. The species has experienced
significant declines from historic numbers and only about 4,000 breeding
individuals remain. The National Audubon Society identified the Gunnison
sage-grouse as one of the ten most endangered birds in the United States
in 2006.
- Mono Basin sage-grouse (candidate species)
are a genetically distinct population of greater sage-grouse that occur
in small populations north, west, and south of Mono Lake in eastern
California and southwestern Nevada. The total population of Mono Basin
sage-grouse is estimated between 2,712-3,048 in 2010.
- The lesser prairie-chicken (candidate species)
occurs in shinnery oak and sand sagebrush grasslands in parts of Colorado,
Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. The species' current distribution
has been reduced to approximately 8 percent of historic range. Total
population is variously estimated between 10,000-50,000 individuals,
although some experts have warned that fewer than 10,000 birds may remain.
- Once considered the most abundant grouse in
the Intermountain West, Columbian sharp-tailed grouse distribution has
been dramatically reduced since 1900. The subspecies now occurs on less
than ten percent of its historic range. Although millions of Columbian
sharp-tailed grouse occurred in the West historically, only 18,000-25,000
breeding individuals remain in the United States.
WildEarth Guardians' letter to President Obama
is available here.

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