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Greater Sage-grouse Warranted…but Precluded from ESA Protection

Date
March 5, 2009
Contact
Mark Salvo (503) 757-4221
In This Release
Climate + Energy, Wildlife   Greater sage grouse
#KeepItInTheGround, #SafeguardTheSagebrushSea
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Greater Sage-grouse Warranted…but Precluded from ESA Protection

Seven years after conservationists petitioned to protect greater sage-grouse under the Endangered Species Act, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced today that the species is “warranted but precluded” from listing under the Act.
Contact: Mark Salvo (503) 757-4221

Seven years after conservationists petitioned to protect greater sage-grouse under the Endangered Species Act, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced today that the species is “warranted but precluded” from listing under the Act.The grouse will now join 249 other imperiled species on the list of “candidate species” under the ESA. The decision marks the agency’s second attempt to assess the species for listing after the Bush Administration published an ecologically flawed, politically tainted decision not to list the grouse in 2005.

“We were right, the Bush Administration was wrong,” said Mark Salvo, Director of the
Sagebrush Sea Campaign. “The sage-grouse is in trouble.”

The greater sage-grouse is a charismatic bird that lives in sagebrush steppe in eleven western
states. First described by Lewis and Clark in 1805, nineteenth century travelers and settlers
reported seeing huge flocks of sage-grouse that darkened the sky as they lifted from valley
floors. However, westward expansion and development over the next 200 years eliminated
almost half of sagebrush habitat. The total sage-grouse population, estimated between 140,000-
500,000 birds, has declined between 69-99 percent from historic levels.

“The action by Secretary Salazar and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service comes years too late as
hundreds of thousands of acres of sage-grouse habitat have been permanently altered or reduced
in value for this charismatic native species since the initial petition for listing,” said Dr. Clait
Braun, Director of Grouse, Inc. “Some populations are already at the brink of extirpation in each
of the states where this species persists.” Dr. Braun, retired Avian Research Program Manager
for the Colorado Division of Wildlife, has been involved with sage-grouse research and
management since 1973.

Myriad human activities in the Sagebrush Sea have decimated sage-grouse habitat, includinglivestock grazing, oil and gas development, agricultural conversion, application of herbicides andpesticides, unnatural fire, urban sprawl, mining, off-road vehicle use, and the placement and construction of utility corridors, roads and fences.

“The only way sage-grouse will survive is if large areas of the sagebrush sea are left
undeveloped, and chronic disturbances like livestock grazing are removed from those areas,”
said Katie Fite, Biodiversity Director for Western Watersheds Project. “This sad delay will make
it much more difficult to effectively conserve this magnificent bird.”

The Fish and Wildlife Service’s finding indicates that current conservation efforts are failing to
conserve sage-grouse. The grouse’s new status as a candidate species may require agencies such as the Bureau of Land Management to revise their land use plans on public land to improve
habitat for sage-grouse and other sagebrush species.

“I look forward to making a careful review of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s reasons for
this decision for sage-grouse,” said Jon Marvel, Executive Director of Western Watersheds
Project. “That review will determine if further litigation is needed to bring the agency into
compliance with the law.”

The Sagebrush Sea Campaign, a program of WildEarth Guardians, was the lead petitioner to list
the greater sage-grouse under the Endangered Species Act. Western Watersheds Project, a
western conservation organization, successfully litigated a remand of the negative listing
decision in 2007. Advocates for the West represented Western Watersheds Project in federal
court. More than twenty conservation groups joined the petition to list sage-grouse under the
ESA in 2003.

Resources
Video and images of sage-grouse, factsheets on sage-grouse and the Sagebrush Sea, and maps of sage-grouse range and land use in the West are posted at www.sagebrushsea.org.

 

Other Contact
“We were right, the Bush Administration was wrong,” said Mark Salvo, Director of theSagebrush Sea Campaign. “The sage-grouse is in trouble.”