The Sage Grouse is NOT getting Endangered Species Act protection

Typography

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today abandoned its plan to give Endangered Species Act protection to Mono Basin sage grouse, a small and isolated population of prairie birds in Nevada and California that remain under threat from grazing, habitat loss and mining development. The agency’s decision ignores scientific recommendations for reversing the birds’ steep decline and relies on unproven conservation agreements with state and local communities.

The Mono Basin greater sage grouse population, located in eastern California and western Nevada and also known as the “bi-state” population, is fragmented and geographically isolated from all other greater sage grouse populations. 

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service today abandoned its plan to give Endangered Species Act protection to Mono Basin sage grouse, a small and isolated population of prairie birds in Nevada and California that remain under threat from grazing, habitat loss and mining development. The agency’s decision ignores scientific recommendations for reversing the birds’ steep decline and relies on unproven conservation agreements with state and local communities.

The Mono Basin greater sage grouse population, located in eastern California and western Nevada and also known as the “bi-state” population, is fragmented and geographically isolated from all other greater sage grouse populations. 

“As recently as December 2014, the Service considered that the magnitude of threats faced by bi-state sage-grouse was so high that the birds were assigned the maximum priority for listing,” said Michael Connor, California director of Western Watersheds Project. “The Service’s backpedalling in claiming that unfinished management plans and voluntary, cooperative agreements will protect the species is untrue, and smacks of political expediency.” 

The bi-state “distinct population segment,” which was proposed for listing as “threatened,” is an isolated and important subpopulation of a species that is eligible for protection under the Endangered Species Act. The 2013 listing proposal cited the small population size and “inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms,” coupled with multiple threats from livestock grazing, invasive plants such as cheat grass, fire, energy development, mining, infrastructure, urbanization of habitat and other factors all combining to justify protection under the Endangered Species Act.

The six populations in the Mono Basin area have not topped 2,500 birds over the past decade, according to official estimates. By contrast the largest population of Gunnison sage grouse, which the Service recently listed as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, is nearly 5,000 birds.

Given the known threats to bi-state sage grouse, the conservation measures do not protect adequate protection. Specific shortcomings include: (1) failure to protect sage grouse nests with adequate grass cover to hide eggs from predators; (2) calling for livestock to reduce flammable cheat grass, a practice that has not been proven to be effective; (3) no restrictions on geothermal leases that would cover 143,000 acres of habitat; (4) no restrictions on mining; and (5) no requirement to limit overall disturbance density to under 3 percent of habitat.   

“Many of the most serious threats to the Mono Basin sage grouse remain unaddressed, and its tiny and isolated populations are under imminent threat of extinction,” said Erik Molvar, wildlife biologist with WildEarth Guardians. “Today’s decision does nothing to resolve the problems facing this special population, it just punts the issue to the courts.”

 

Read more at Center for Biological Diversity.