Yellowstone Delisting Beginning of End For Griz
By
Doug Peacock
Only
A Federal Challenge Can
Stop The April 29, 2007 Delisting
On March 29, 2007, the
Department of the Interior removed federal protection for Yellowstone's
grizzly bears under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). On April 29th
this 'de-listing'
will take effect. Only a challenge in federal court can stop this final
ruling.
I believe
this decision will mark the beginning of the end of the grizzly in
the contiguous states. Here are three reasons: Insofar as the
Yellowstone
population's de-listing is based on estimates of the number of bears,
the removal
of ESA protection for the grizzlies in and around Glacier Park
(where the data on numbers is considered more reliable) will soon
follow.
Second,
de-listing may represent one of the most destructive actions this
administration has yet taken against the natural world, largely because
the Yellowstone grizzly delisting
policy was developed hand-in-hand
with the government's denial of the existence of global warming, an
unimaginable firestorm approaching us all, and this proposal reflects
that
lingering ignorance.
Finally, the myopic and political removal of Yellowstone's
grizzlies from the Endangered Species list effectively eliminates
practical discussion
of the linkages necessary for countless species of plants and animals
that will
need to move northward and higher to survive.
I'm saying
that our best chance of keeping alive and pragmatic the visionary
idea of interlinking corridors (like those proposed by the Wildlands
Project,
Yellowstone to Yukon, the Northern
Rockies
Ecosystem Protection Act and others) is the attainable goal of
connecting the
isolated grizzly ecosystem of Yellowstone northward to Canada.
Without
the protection that was afforded the bear under the ESA, the
opportunity to
complete those linkages will soon be cut off by human development and Yellowstone will remain the island that refutes
our grand
dreams for connectivity. The grizzly still affordsthe widest available
biological
shoulders upon which countless plants and animals may hitch a ride in
their
struggle to adapt to rapidly shifting habitats.
The
decision to remove Yellowstone's
grizzlies
from the ESA can now only be reversed by a suit in federal court. Legal
arguments will revolve around about bear biology. Here are some
concerns:The
greatest climatic changes in history are now facing the Yellowstone
ecosystem and already threaten major bear foods. Whitebark pine, and
the nuts
it produces, is arguably the grizzly's most important fall food. A
two-degree
warming since the 1970s has rendered these trees vulnerable to blister
rust and
beetle infestation; whitebark pines are dying and could be eliminated
from Yellowstone
Park within
a few decades. Remnant
stands of trees would survive only in the coldest outlying regions of
the
ecosystem, namely the Wind River Range of Wyoming. With de-listing, management
of this
last refuge for pine nut eating grizzlies will be turned over to the
state. Wyoming's
bear
management plan would not permit significant numbers of grizzlies
anywhere in
the Winds and none at all in the southern half of the range.
The Forest
Service and Wyoming
post de-listing management plans are inadequate for grizzly survival.
The
number of bears in Yellowstone has
rebounded
because the grizzly was listed on the ESA in 1975. The Federal Wildlife
Service
has credibly administered this policy and they should keep doing it.
The FWS
currently claims that it can make 'adjustments' or re-list the bear if
the Yellowstone grizzly population
again plummets. But it
will be too late by then. The states lack the resources to monitor the
number
of grizzlies. This is not the time for a change in the great bear's
status.
There are
other issues, other food problems, but the nut remains this: the Yellowstone grizzly is an island ecosystem
surrounded by
a sea of human industrial and commercial development chewing up the
remaining
habitat needed for the genetic and physical linkage to northern
populations and
necessary for long-term survival. On top of that, great and uncharted
changes
driven by global warming are comingto us all.
Grizzlies
are touted for their adaptability and ability to find new food
sources. They should be as well suited to survive the predicted wave of
extinction as any wild animal, except for the attitudes, personified by
intolerance
and greed, of people who historically have killed them and destroyed
their habitat.
Sometime in this century Homo sapiens must contend with real threats to
our own
survival and mayrecognize in the face of the adversary those same human
attitudes.
During these times, a vigilant generosity towards the natural world is
not
inappropriate; may we hope for a distant reciprocation.
This note
is my first, and perhaps last, fundraising letter. I wrote it because
of the enormous and destructive importance of this governmental action:
We
cannot afford to allow the final ruling to remove the bear from the ESA
to slip
through uncontested. I also wrote it because of my unmitigated faith in
the
people of the Bozeman
office of Earthjustice to do the work. You can support the legal
efforts to
protect this magnificent species by writing a check to Earthjustice,
indicating
that your contribution should be allocated to the Grizzly Delisting
case. The cost
of expert witnesses, court costs and attorney time for a case of this
magnitude
will likely exceed $500,000.
If you
have the means and
might consider making a substantial donation toward this case, please
call Doug
Honnold at Earthjustice, (406) 586-9699, with any questions or to
discuss it further.
All levels of support are greatly welcomed: checks may besent to
Earthjustice, 209 S.
Willson Ave., Bozeman, MT 59715.
Contact Doug Peacock
for more information
about protecting Yellowstone’s
fragile grizzly
population.
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