Consider the former distribution of imperiled carnivores of the American West: A grizzly bear still graces the California state flag despite being hunted to its extinction in the Golden State nearly a century ago. More than 20 subspecies of canis lupus the gray wolf once roamed a vast swath of North America, from northern Canada into central Mexico. Wolverines, solitary hunters and scavengers partial to mountainous environments with reliable springtime snow cover, occupied parts of California and Colorado in the early 1900s. Their range in the Lower 48 is now confined to remote outposts of the Northern Rockies and Pacific Northwest.
The primary tool the United States has for keeping those reduced ranges from contracting to nothing is the Endangered Species Act. When President Richard Nixon, a Republican, signed the act into law in 1973, he celebrated the countrys rich array of animal life, saying nothing is more priceless and more worthy of preservation. But with human activity driving a mass extinction event the likes of which Earth hasnt seen since a meteor crashed into the Yucatan Peninsula 66 million years ago, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services nearly 50-year-old directive is becoming increasingly complicated. The agency wants to respond with more aggressive measures to ward off extinction.
On June 6, the agency unveiled a proposal that would give it more latitude to establish experimental populations of endangered or threatened species outside their current or probable historic range. The agency billed the measure as an update to proven conservation tools that could prevent more species from becoming stranded in habitats rendered unsustainable by climate change and invasive species.
The time to act and use every tool at our disposal is now, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland said in the release.
The agency said in emails to Montana Free Press that the proposal was not developed with particular species in mind, but public comments submitted to the agency thus far (its accepting comments on the proposed rule change through Aug. 8) offers clues to potential target species. Champions of Key deer, which are unique to the lower Florida Keys, describe reintroduction outside the species historic range as absolutely crucial to preventing extinction as sea levels rise. And in the West, environmentalists have long argued that the endangered Mexican wolf, currently found in southern Arizona and New Mexico as well as northern Mexico, could be introduced as far north as Colorado. But some Arizona ranchers, whove described the introduction of Mexican wolves as having a devastating impact on agricultural communities, arent keen on future introduction programs and their potential to introduce economic and environmental harms.
Though still in its earliest stages, USFWSs proposal, sometimes called assisted migration, evokes sticky questions about how and where the federal government should focus its efforts and about the ultimate goals of ecological restoration. Some environmentalists have praised the agencys proposal, calling it a conservation game-changer thats long overdue. Others describe themselves as leery of wildlife managers ability to get assisted migration right, given ample evidence of past natural resource management missteps.
Mike Phillips, director of the Bozeman-based Turner Endangered Species Fund, says restore to what? is one of the cardinal questions restoration ecologists tangle with. Most folks would say and Ive said this, too restore to historic conditions. It had to be really good in the past, right? he said. Increasingly, I think thats an inadequate answer, in part because climate change is reshuffling the ecological deck and, in some cases, rendering historic ranges insignificant or not significant enough. He said such profound changes merit a corresponding change in wildlife managers approach to conservation.
Ranges for many North American plants and animals are moving up either north in latitude, or higher in elevation according to David Parsons, a longtime USFWS biologist-turned- conservation nonprofit staffer. In some cases, he said, species are getting pushed off the top of mountains, meaning a species that has historically lived on one mountain or range can no longer find what it needs to survive there and has to seek refuge at even higher-elevations.
Parsons said USFWS assisted migration strategy would support efforts to stem the planets rising biological diversity loss crisis, which international leaders cited as the No. 3 risk facing the globe during the 2022 World Economic Forum. (Climate action failure topped the list, followed by extreme weather.)
With species extinction rates a thousand times or higher than they should be, there are going to be plenty more animals in need of rescue, Parsons said.
Both Parsons, a resident of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Phillips, a Bozemanite, have masters degrees in wildlife ecology and have been involved in efforts to recover the Mexican wolf, which was listed as endangered in 1976. Parsons directed the USFWS Mexican wolf recovery program from 1990 to 1999 and remains involved in his current post as the nonprofit Rewilding Institutes carnivore conservation biologist. Phillips joined a Mexican wolf recovery advisory committee in 1995 and continued working on that effort until 2017.
Most folks would say and Ive said this, too restore to historic conditions. It had to be really good in the past, right? Increasingly, I think thats an inadequate answer, in part because climate change is reshuffling the ecological deck and in some cases, rendering historic ranges insignificant or not significant enough.
The two share a belief that any unintended consequences arising from the introduction of imperiled species into novel habitats for example, a surge or decline in other plant and animal populations can be minimized. Phillips said due diligence and an intentional, science-based plan paired with monitoring and tweaking as needed can go a long way toward preventing undesirable distortions to the complex web of interactions that underpin ecological systems.
Phillips acknowledged that mistakes will be made along the way, but said he believes in doing everything possible to address the extinction crisis. Deciding not to take action is still a decision with attendant consequences, he said. If you want an at-bat, you have to accept the fact that you might strike out. You have to accept the fact that you may create a problem, a double play for example. But my gosh, how unexciting would life be if you dont want an at-bat?
Others, like Clint Nagel, a retired U.S. Geological Survey hydrologic technician who remains active in natural resource issues through his work with groups including the Gallatin Wildlife Association, cast a wary eye on the proposal. Nagel says theres no shortage of presumably well-intentioned wildlife management efforts that have unfavorably misshapen ecological systems, including within the National Park system.
Yellowstone National Park, for example, is engaged in a decades-long, multimillion-dollar effort to rid Yellowstone Lake of lake trout, which are believed to have migrated from Lewis Lake, where they were stocked in 1890. Lake trout have wreaked havoc on the native cutthroat trout population in Yellowstone Lake, Nagel says.
About 50 miles south, the National Park Service is neck-deep in a protracted effort to get mountain goats out of Grand Teton National Park due to concerns that theyre introducing bacterial diseases to bighorn sheep and outcompeting them for forage. In February, the park used helicopters and sharpshooters to kill 58 mountain goats in Grand Teton as part of that effort.
With species extinction rates a thousand times or higher than they should be, there are going to be plenty more animals in need of rescue.
Such sagas dont bode well for heavy-handed approaches to wildlife management, Nagel argues.
Personally, I dont trust mankind to play God, he said. You know that old saying, We dont know what we dont know? I just see humans as being extremely arrogant where we think we know and understand the complexities of Mother Nature, and we dont.
Nagel acknowledged a measure of cynicism in that view, but said he worries that the federal wildlife agency has resigned itself to an extreme approach when a stronger commitment to existing conservation tools might be a better tack.
Id rather see the agency try to preserve the habitat that we have, rather than giving up on that and trying to put species where they may not belong, he said.
Char Miller, a professor of environmental analysis and history at Pomona College in California said he isnt entirely opposed to the use of assisted migration, but calls for a vigorous vetting process first. Miller argues that natural resource managers should take a hard look at the data and focus on supporting species that have a decent shot at surviving a warmer and potentially drier climate, rather than reflexively trying to conserve existing populations of favored species.
In a recent L.A. Times op-ed, he argued that installing sprinklers at the base of giant sequoia trees in Yosemite National Park to increase their odds of surviving the nearby Washburn Fire represents a denial of current and future conditions. A more proactive approach to meaningful climate adaptation would be better, he said.
As much as the Washburn Fire tactics caused a sigh of relief among Yosemite lovers, the Park Service needs to acknowledge that it makes no sense to install sprinklers to protect giant sequoias from conversions that a warming planet is unleashing in the Mariposa Grove and elsewhere, he wrote. We cannot irrigate our way out of climate change.
Miller said humans tend not to be adept at taking a 30,000-foot view of such complicated questions, but argues that the landscape-scale changes caused by a changing climate merit a similarly expansive perspective, in both geographic and temporal terms.
Is it really appropriate, Miller asked, to attempt to save the dry conifer forests of the southwest if the temperature and precipitation necessary to keep them viable wont materialize? And if conifer forests cede ground to a northward-expanding Sonoran desert, should people resist that ecological shift?
The human tendency is to fix things with tools and technologies that we havent really interrogated, he said, pointing to the historical use of the pesticide DDT, which forced birds of prey like bald eagles and osprey into decline, as an example. Its not that I want hands off, he said. I want minds on.
Greta Anderson, deputy director of Western Watersheds Project, a conservation organization that focuses on protecting watersheds and wildlife habitat on western public lands, said she appreciates both the enthusiasm and skepticism USFWSs proposal elicits.
These are the things that I think about all of the time, she said. There is a truth to biogeography species move around to suitable niches on their own, or go extinct on their own, based on fluxes in their environment. That is absolutely true. But we have unnaturally accelerated the opportunity for species to adapt and weve unnaturally limited their mobility within their adaptive geographic space. Weve bounded them.
Personally, I dont trust mankind to play God. You know that old saying, We dont know what we dont know?
Anderson said the Endangered Species Act is sometimes likened to a safety net for imperiled plants and animals. She said she sees the rule change proposal as a way of perhaps repairing some of the loopholes in that net. As such, she supports it.
She also said her primary hope is that humans do more to support ecological resilience at a landscape scale to give plants and animals more room to survive on their own terms. Shes supportive of the America the Beautiful initiative President Joe Biden unveiled last year, a proposal to conserve 30% of the countrys land and water by 2030.
I think doing land conservation and protection in the broadest way possible is what we have to do in the near-term, so that whatever we end up [pursuing] in the long-term is still possible, she said. If we continue to slice away the pie, those opportunities are going to be gone.
The controversies that wildlife management can engender are no secret, particularly in Montana, which has managed to hold on to the vast majority of its native mammals. The management of animals currently or formerly on the endangered species list is arguably the most controversial of all, with advocates for or against federal protections often engaging in a decades-long tug-of-war. Sociologists sometimes use the phrase high conflict to describe such stubborn stalemates. Theyve found plenty of it in the management of carnivores.
As with wildlife introduction efforts, policymakers have a pretty rocky history of involving the public well in all sorts of natural resource decisions, said Alex Metcalf, a University of Montana professor who teaches courses on the human dimension of resource management to forestry and wildlife biology students. He underscores the importance of engaging stakeholders and really listening to their feedback the earlier, the better, he said.
On paper at least, USFWS plans to develop any assisted migration programs with input from diverse state, local and Tribal partners. USFWS Director Martha Williams, who formerly led Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, expresses a commitment to locally-driven, partnership based solutions in agency writings about the proposal.
Metcalf anticipates that some introduction programs of, say, trumpeter swans could go uneventfully well. Others will be more fraught, he said, offering as a cautionary tale the history of gray wolf management, which reliably draws impassioned testimony in the Montana Legislature and before the states Fish and Wildlife Commission some 27 years after wolves from Canada were released in Yellowstone National Park. Metcalf also said there is no one-size-fits-all approach that will work everywhere. USFWS wont necessarily be able to replicate one successfully executed introduction program in another region with a different species, he said.
One of my mentors used to say to me, Once youve studied one rural community, youve studied one rural community, he said. The social piece of this is really complicated.
Asked if he has one piece of advice to offer USFWS as the agency moves into assisted migration territory, Metcalf urged patience and good-faith interactions with stakeholders, while also acknowledging the mismatched timelines of environmental need and the pace of social change.
Its pretty clear you cannot rush the social process. If you do, you end up with entrenched opposition among the very people you need for success. So, as uncomfortable as it may be, you have to take the time to do it right, he said. Thats not a comfortable answer. Thats not a happy feeling. But I think it is the reality.
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Where will all the wildlife go? - Montana Free Press
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