legislative response to endangerment lacey act (1900; amended 1981) –game birds and other birds,...
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Legislative Response to Endangerment
• Lacey Act (1900; amended 1981)– Game birds and other birds, possession of protected species
• Endangered Species Preservation Act of 1966– Habitat acquisition
• Endangered Species Conservation Act of 1969– Inverts, trade,
– Started process that led to CITES
• Endangered Species Act of 1973– amended 1978, 1982, 1988
CITES
• Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora– Signed 3 March 1973, Implemented 1975,
Amended 1979– Requires permit for import or export of
species listed • includes body parts like ivory, leather, shrunken
heads, etc
ESA of 1973
• Basic Intent and Purpose– “to provide a means whereby the ecosystems upon which
endangered species and threatened species depend may be conserved, to provide a program for the conservation of such endangered species and threatened species, and to take such steps as may be appropriate to achieve the purposes of the treaties and conventions set forth in subsection (a) of this section”
– “a law that plays in when local planning and zoning, state fish and wildlife efforts, the Clean Water Act, and Clean Air Act haven’t worked. It is the emergency room of conservation policy” (M. Beattie 1995)
Principal Provisions of ESA (USFWS 1996)
• Define “endangered” and “threatened” and empowered the Secretary of Interior and Commerce to list species (Sect. 3)
• Species of plants and inverts are available for listing, as well as species and populations of vertebrates (Sect. 3)
• Combined US and foreign species lists with uniform provisions applied to both (Sect. 4)
• Provide matching funds for state coop agreements (Sect. 6)
• Allow US to implement CITES (Sect. 8)
Classifying Endangerment
• Listing species is first step toward conservation
• During listing they are classified as “Endangered” or “Threatened”– endangered- “any species which is in danger of
extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range”
– threatened- “any species which is likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range”
What are T&E Functionally?
• Wilcove et al. (1993) reviewed characteristics of listed species– Endangered animals (median values)
• 515 individuals, 1-5 populations
– Endangered plants (medians)• 99 individuals, 3 populations
– Threatened animals• 4161 individuals, 1-5 populations
– Threatened plants• 2499 individuals, 9 populations
IUCN Categories
• Much more biologically based (Mace and Lande 1991 and updates)– Extinct– Extinct in the wild– Threatened
• Critically Endangered
• Endangered
• Vulnerable
– Lower Risk• Near Threatened
• Least Concern
Threatened IUCN Categories
• Critically Endangered “extreme risk of extinction in the wild in the immediate future”
• Endangered “high risk of extinction in the wild in the near future”
• Vulnerable “high risk of extinction in the wild in the medium-term future”
ESA vs IUCN categories
• Wilcove et al.’s analysis suggests that listed species in US under ESA are in two most critical classes of IUCN categorization – low number of indivduals (<5000) and few (<9)
populations– emphasizes that the ESA is REACTIVE not
proactive and shows why many species do not recover after listing--they’re too far gone already
Administration of the Act
• Done by US Fish and Wildlife Service or National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries)
• Two main thrusts– LISTING– RECOVERY
Listing
• Initiated by petition (individual, group, agency) or Service uses its priority system and available biological information
• Priority system for listing
High Risk Moderate to Low RiskImminent
ThreatNon-imminent
ThreatImminent
ThreatNon-imminent
ThreatMonotypic Genus 1 4 7 10Species 2 5 8 11Subspecies 3 6 9 12
There are Too Many Listings to Be Processed on Time
• USFWS has 4 tiers of priority to handle this
• Tier 1--Emergency listing actions – immediate listing of species in imminent risk of
extinction
• Tier 2--Final listing decisions, sorting among candidate species, processing petitions to list, and reclassifying species by de- or down-listing
• Tier 3--Critical habitat determination
How are Species Prioritized for Listing?
• Recall the stated listing criteria used by USFWS
• But, species are not listed in order of priority.– Service gets sued, tries to complete final listing rules before
considering new proposals, etc.• Conservation groups (PEER, Fund for Animals, etc) have been
concerned about a more fundamental problem--DELAY AND LACK of listing
– 33% are listed on time, 18% are >1year late
High Risk Moderate to Low RiskImminent
ThreatNon-imminent
ThreatImminent
ThreatNon-imminent
ThreatMonotypic Genus 1 4 7 10Species 2 5 8 11Subspecies 3 6 9 12
Listing Delays (GAO 1993)
• Congress– May limit listing budgets
• Eg., Public law 104-6 (FY 1996 budget act)– rescinded listing budget thereby imposing a moratorium on
listing
– removed with Clinton’s budget act in April 1996
– created a backlog of 243 species needing listing
– May rescind the ESA• 5 million for 1998
– PEER claims its self-imposed to give the Service a way out of lawsuits seeking listing
– USFWS counters that it is all they could expect to get
More Reasons for Delays• Insufficient data
– spotted frog (3 year delay and then got “Warranted, but Precluded” by higher priorities)
• Economic impacts of listing– spotted frog, Louisiana black bear, Jemez Mountains
salamander, Bruneau Hot Springs Snail
• Complete conservation agreements rather than list– Jemez Mountains salamander, Bruneau Hot Springs
Snail
Effect of Delays
• Lawsuits– Fund for Animals sued for listing of 85
Species in 1992• court ordered service get in gear and process
listing petitions• subverts priority system
– only 41 of 85 species were priority 1,2, or 3
• delays ability (uses available funds) to list others not in the settlement agreement
Major Effect of Not Following Priority System
• Arbitrary and Capricious Conservation– Sidle (1998)
• Lynx
Recovery
• Outline of recovery actions needed within 60 days
• Recovery Plans developed by Recovery Team for the Regional Manager
• Prioritization of species (add C for conflict)
High Risk Moderate Risk Low RiskHigh
ThreatLow
ThreatHigh
ThreatLow
ThreatHigh
ThreatLow
ThreatMonotypic Genus 1 4 7 10 13 16Species 2 5 8 11 14 17Subspecies 3 6 9 12 15 18
Recovery Tasks For A Species
• Tasks prioritized by recovery team– Priority 1--action that must be taken to prevent extinction
or prevent the species from declining irreversibly– Priority 2--action that must be taken to prevent a
significant decline in species population or habitat that comes short of extinction
– Priority 3--all other actions necessary to provide for full recovery of the species
• Combined with species priority rank
– 1c-1 (top priority to do on top species)
Are Priorities Followed? (GAO 1988)
• Are recovery tasks done?– Not all of them
• only slightly more than 50% of tasks in 16 plans were initiated despite the plans being in place for an average of 4+ years
• Are species recovered in order of their priority?• NO, a few species get the bulk of the funds
– most funds go to 12 species, 6 of which are highly endangered and 2 of which are barely threatened
• Are recovery tasks done in order of priority?• NO, in all but 2 of 16 species lower priority tasks were done
before all priority 1 tasks were completed
Why Aren’t Priorities Followed?• Congressional earmarking
– takes part of Service budget and stipulates it to be spent on particular species
• Allure of sexy species– high visibility, good PR, good chance of recovery
• Lawsuits– For sexy species with public appeal
• Poor Coordination– Conservation of species in one part of its range may not offset
conservation in less important region• Plans are not kept up to date
– priorities may no longer be valid
Effect of Earmarking
• 1994– total recovery budget for usfws = 29.55 million– Earmarked portion was 10.392 million (35%)
• Only 28% of the earmarks were for species ranked as 1 or 2 on the priority list
• A few sexy big winners– Peregrine (900K) rank = 9– Condor (600K) rank = 4C– Wolves (1.6 mill) rank =3-5C– Manatee (500K) rank = 5C– Spotted Owls (2.35 mil) rank = 9C
Why?
• No Congressional influence to muddy the funding waters– Single Commonwealth minister, in
consultation with advisors, can effectively allocate funds based on national priorities
• No provision to challenge outcome of allocation in the courts
Section 9 Provisions
• Limit any person subject to jurisdiction of US to take endangered species (harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect, or to attempt to engage in such conduct)– Harm was later defined and upheld by
Supreme Court (1995; Babbitt vs. Sweet Home Chapter of Communities for a Great Oregon) to include HABITAT MODIFICATION
Section 9 Provisions Apply to Endangered, Not Threatened Species
• Automatic application of all provisions to ENDANGERED SPECIES
• THREATENED SPECIES can have benefits, but must be stated by Secretary– Sect 4(d) the secretary can “issue such
regulations as he deems necessary and advisable to provide for the conservation” of threatened species, including regulations that prohibit any or all of the activities prohibited for endangered species
Section 7 Provisions: Federal Agencies Must:
• (1) Cooperate with the Secretaries and use their own programs to further the conservation of endangered and threatened species, and
• (2) Not authorize, fund, or carry out any action that would jeopardize a listed species or destroy or modify its critical habitat
– Jeopardy refers to acts that reasonably would be expected, indirectly or directly, to reduce appreciably the likelihood of survival and recovery by reducing reproduction, numbers of distribution of a listed species
• weighs proposed activity plus CUMULATIVE EFFECTS of activities likely to occur on state and private lands
Section 7 Consultation
• Federal agencies must consult with the Service when activity affects listed species or likely jeopardizes proposed species or habitat– Informal Consultation--usually done to get
exemption from formal consultation (no effect)
– Formal Consultation--Action will affect listed species. Service does a Biological Opinion of whether action will result in jeopardy
• must be completed within 90 days of initiation and delivered within 45 days
1978 Amendments
• Section 7 EXEMPTIONS for FEDERAL AGENCIES– After a biological opinion has been rendered by the
service, the affected agency, the governor of the affected State, or the applicant for the federal permit of questionable effect (if applicable) can petition the Secretary
– Secretary determines within 20 days if basic requirements of act are met and passes report to Endangered Species Committee
• “God Squad”, “Gang of 7”
The Squad
• Secretaries of Interior, Agriculture, and Army
• Administrators of EPA, NOAA
• Chairman of Council of Economic Advisors
• Presidentially appointed representative from any affected state
Exemption is Given if 5 of 7 Conclude:
• There are no reasonable or prudent alternatives for the agency
• The benefits of the action clearly outweigh the benefits of species conservation and the benefits are for the public good
• The action is of regional or national significance• The agency or applicant did not purposefully
over-commit resources that would preclude any reasonable or prudent alternatives
Two Exemptions Have Been Given
• Grayrocks Dam, Wyoming (1979)– court settlement provided for compromise solution
• BLM Timber sales, Oregon (1992)– Spotted Owl habitat--Environmental groups sued claiming
that Bush and staff had illegal contact with God Squad• Long litigation history with these sales has kept them
from being harvested– BLM withdrew exemption application in 1993 when Clinton
was elected– Attempted again with G. W. Bush– Withdrawn again with Obama (follow NW Forest Plan)
Designating Critical Habitat
• Critical Habitat includes habitat in and out of current range that contains physical or biological features (1) essential to the conservation of the species and (2) requiring special management considerations or protection.
• Federal agencies must not jeopardize listed species or appreciably affect their abundance by reducing or modifying their critical habitat (Sect. 7)
• Required to be designated at time of listing– if PRUDENT and considering economics– USFWS changing mind on its importance
Designating Experimental Populations
• 1982 amendment added exemption for experimental populations– population established by human intervention
that is outside of the species’ current range– essential versus nonessential experimental
populations• essential have full protection of Section 7
• nonessential is not protected by Section 7
• all are viewed as THREATENED species
– can be helpful in getting public support/access
Experimental Populations Can Backfire
• Yellowstone & central ID wolves– 1997, judge found that introduced wolves could
not be considered a nonessential experimental population and ordered them removed (stayed, pending appeal)
– USFWS claim that reintroduction areas are outside of current range is arbitrary and capricious
– Cannot keep experimental population in area because it diminishes protection to natural population
Incidental Take
• Incidental take is take that results from some activity “but is not the purpose of the otherwise lawful activity.”
• Can take species only with permit– Federal agencies get “incidental take statement”
in biological opinion during section 7 consultation– Private and state entities get “incidental take
permit” (Sect. 10) by negotiating a habitat conservation plan (HCP)
Mitigation for Take
• Basically incidental take is allowed if it is:– minimized and will not appreciably reduce the
likelihood of survival and recovery of species– mitigated– defined as to extent– monitored– all alternatives are impractical– applicant ensures funding and means to deal
with unexpected circumstances
Getting off the List
• Priority system for de-listing and down-listing as well– based on petition status and the impact of the
reclassification on other management (how much $ will be freed up to do other work)
High Impact Moderate Impact Low ImpactPetitioned 1 3 5Unpetitioned 2 4 6
Enforcement and Penalty
• Citizen suits---backbone of the act– can sue individuals, corporations, or agencies
• Penalties depend on status of species, knowledge of violator– knowing violators can get 1year in prison and
$50,000 fine (half of both for threatened species)
– can revoke leases, licenses, etc.– equipment can be forfeited
Literature Cited• USFWS 1996. A summary of the ESA and implementation activities.
(www.fws.gov/r9endspp/esasum.html).• Bean, M. J. and M. J. Rowland. 1997. The evolution of national wildlife law,
Third Edition. Praeger. Westport, CN.• USFWS 1983. Endangered and threatened species listing and recovery
priority guidelines. 48FR 43098.• Garnett, S; Crowley, G., and A. Balmford. 2003. The costs and effectiveness
of funding the conservation of Australian Threatened Birds. BioScience 53:658-665.
• Knibb, David. In press. Grizzly Wars. U. W. Press• Restani, M. and J. M. Marzluff 2001. Avian conservation under the
Endangered Species Act: Expenditures versus recovery priorities. Conservation Biology 15:1292-1299.
• Restani, M. and J. M. Marzluff. 2002. Funding extinction? Biological needs and political realities in the allocation of resources for endangered species recovery. BioScience 52:169-177.
Literature Cited
• USFWS. 1997. Recovery plan for the threatened Marbled Murrelet in Washington, Oregon, and California. Portland, OR. 203pp.
• GAO. 1993. Factors associated with delayed listing decisions. GAO/RCED-93-152.
• Sidle, JG. 1998. Arbitrary and capricious species conservation. Conservation Biology 12:248-249.
• Clark, T. W., Reading, R. P., and Clark, A. L. (eds.) 1994. Endangered species recovery: finding the lessons, improving the process. Island Press
References
• Dennis, B. Munholland, PL, and Scott, JM. 1991. Estimation of growth and extinction parameters for endangered species. Ecol. Monogr. 61:115-143.
• Shaffer, ML. 1981. Minimum population sizes for species conservation. Bioscience 31:131-134.
• Boyce, MS. 1992. Population viability analysis. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 23:481-506.
• Leigh, E. G. Jr. 1981. The average lifetime of a population in a varying environment. J. Theor. Biol. 90:213-239.
• Lande, R. 1988. Genetics and demography in biological conservation. Science 241:1455-1460.
• Simberloff, D. 1988. The contribution of population and community biology to conservation science. Ann. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 19:473-511
More References
• Thompson, G.G. 1991. Determining minimum viable populations under the endangered species act. NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS F/NWC-198.
• Mann, C. C., and M. L. Plummer. 1999. A species’ fate, by the numbers. Science 284:36-37.
• Soule, M. E. 1987. Where do we go from here? In M. E. Soule (editor), Viable populations for conservation. P. 175-183. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
• Lande, R. Engen, S., and B-E Sæther. 2003. Stochastic population dynamics in ecology and conservation. Oxford University Press.
• Sæther, B-E, et al. 2005. Time to extinction of bird populations. Ecology 86:693-700.
• Jones, K.E., A. Purvis, and J.L. Gittleman. 2003. Biological correlates of extinction risk in bats. American Naturalist 161:601-614.
• Drake, J.M. and D.M. Lodge. 2004. Effects of environmental variability on extinction and establishment. Ecology Letters 7:26-30.
• Schoener, T.W., Clobert, J., Legendre, S., and D. A. Spiller. 2003. Life-history models of extinction: a test with island spiders. American Naturalist 162:558-573.