[FEL-L] No "critical habitat' for jaguar

BigCatSimba at aol.com BigCatSimba at aol.com
Mon Sep 3 08:26:08 CDT 2007


No "critical habitat' for jaguar
 
Ten years ago, the jaguar, the largest feline in the Western Hemisphere, was 
listed by the federal government as an Endangered Species. As a result of that 
listing, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, the federal agency charged with 
enforcing the provisions of the Endangered Species Act, was to have begun the 
process of establishing a recovery plan for the jaguar, whose native range once 
extended well into what is now the Gila National Forest.  
A large part of any recovery plan is the designation of critical habitat - 
the actual terra firma necessary for any species on the brink of extinction to 
be able to recover sufficiently enough that it can, like the grizzly bear and 
the bald eagle, be de-listed.  
But, according to a lawsuit filed three weeks ago by the Tucson-based Center 
for Biological Diversity, the Fish & Wildlife service balked at establishing 
critical habitat for panthera onca arizonensis, the jaguar sub-species that, 
according to Big Cats Online, once trod these parts.  
According to a finding released on July 12, 2006, USFWS based its decision to 
not designate critical habitat on " É the fact that U.S. habitat is not 
essential to the conservation of the species."  
The finding further stated, quoting Benjamin Tuggle, 
 
acting director of the USFWS' Southwest Region, "Based on a thorough review 
of all available data, the Service has determined there are no physical and 
biological features in the United States that meet the definition of critical 
habitat as defined under the Act." 
"We will continue to work closely with the Jaguar Conservation Team to 
address the conservation of jaguars in the United States and also with our Mexican 
partners to help with conservation of the species in Mexico."  
"There are so many legal and biological problems with that finding that I 
don't even know where to begin," said Michael Robinson, a Pinos Altos-based 
conservation advocate for the CBD. "First, they don't have the choice to make a 
determination to not designate critical habitat. The Endangered Species Act 
requires them to do so. We sued them in 2003, and they agreed at that time to 
adhere to the law. But, here it is, more than four years later, and the only action 
on their part has been a finding saying they don't want to establish critical 
habitat. In the meantime, jaguar habitat continues to be degraded and 
fragmented."  
Since the CBD filed its suit, mum has been the word for USFWS employees when 
it comes to talking about anything jaguar-related. Instead, USFWS spokespeople 
in both New Mexico and Arizona pointed to the 2006 finding notice , which, 
they said, accurately reflects their agency's continued view on the matter.  
At this time, no one even knows for certain how many jaguars there are 
tromping around in the U.S. The last verified sighting in these parts took place in 
1997 between Silver City and Tyrone, the same year the jaguar was declared 
endangered. There is agreement among New Mexico and Arizona Game & Fish personnel 
that there are at least six permanent or semi-permanent jaguars living in and 
around the Peloncillo Mountains in Hidalgo County, New Mexico, and Cochise 
County, Arizona.  
According to Tim Snow, a non-game specialist with the Tucson regional office 
of the Arizona Department of Fish & Game, there certainly could be more 
jaguars living on U.S. soil.  
"We have trip-wire cameras at undisclosed locations in the field, and we have 
definitely identified at least six individuals," Snow said. "The thing is, at 
first, we only had one camera at each location, meaning that, when a jaguar 
passed in the opposite direction, we did not know whether it was the same 
jaguar or a different jaguar. We started putting cameras on each side of the trail 
to get a better record of the individual's distinct markings. There certainly 
could be more jaguars, or these could be the only ones. We're still trying to 
get determine if these individuals even live here permanently."  
Robinson resents the implication.  
"It doesn't matter if there may be only a few jaguars currently living on 
U.S. soil," he said. "We started the Mexican grey wolf reintroduction program 
with only seven wolves. And it doesn't matter if those jaguars represent a 
permanent population or not. They are listed as an Endangered Species in this 
country, and, as such, the law requires that certain actions be taken. This part of 
the country was part of their native range."  
Snow is a member of a group that has been meeting since 1997 called the 
Jaguar Recovery Team, which is made up of land managers, scientists and private 
landowners in both New Mexico and Arizona.  
"We have felt that the work we have been doing is beneficial to the jaguar 
without having to invoke many of the legal requirements of the Endangered 
Species Act," Snow said. "We have seen significant cooperation on the part of 
private landholders, especially ranchers, in this part of the country. We are afraid 
if the establishment of critical habitat is mandated, we might lose some of 
that good will."  
"That's crazy," Robinson said. "That group has not helped designate a single 
acre for jaguar, even though that was part of their own recovery goal. Not one 
acre. They've been talking about jaguar recovery for 10 years, and now 
they've even taken the pledge for habitat protection out of their own governing 
document, even though habitat destruction is the main concern about jaguar 
recovery."  
According to the USFWS 2006 finding document, "U.S. [jaguar] habitat is 
believed to be marginal (at the extreme northern limit of the species' range) and 
represents less than 1 percent of the species' current range. Preservation and 
recovery of the jaguar depends almost entirely on conservation efforts in 
Mexico and Central and South America."  
Robinson calls that statement completely immaterial.  
"We have a very high-profile wolf reintroduction process going on in the 
northern Rockies, even though there are lots of wolves in Canada and Alaska," he 
said. "The grizzly was listed as an Endangered Species, even though there are 
lots of grizzlies in Canada and Alaska. We're taking about an Endangered 
Species listing in the U.S. Certainly, I would hope for cooperation between Fish & 
Wildlife and the governments of other countries when it comes to species 
conservation. But we can not depend on that. We can't base a recovery plan on that." 
 
Robinson also takes umbrage with an assertion by USFWS that the establishment 
of critical habitat is not all that important when it comes to recovering an 
Endangered Species.  
The USFWS 2006 jaguar habitat finding states: "In 30 years of implementing 
the [Endangered Species Act], the Service has found that designation of critical 
habitat provides little additional protection for most listed species, while 
preventing the agency from using scarce conservation resources for activities 
with greater conservation benefits."  
"In a peer-reviewed article in the journal Bio-Science, it was determined 
that Endangered Species that have critical habitat established are almost twice 
as likely to recover as species that do not," Robinson said. "They do not have 
a single document backing that assertion up, and they have even admitted that, 
yet they continue to use that same line all the time. They are lying."  
Shortly before the CBD filed its suit against USFWS, the scientific community 
came together to plead for the establishment of critical habitat for the 
jaguar, according to Robinson.  
"On June 10, 2007, almost 600 biologists from around the nation, members of 
the American Society of Mammologists, unanimously approved a resolution calling 
for a recovery plan and critical habitat designation for jaguars in the 
United States," Robinson said. "The mammologists' resolution noted that "habitat 
for jaguars in the United States, including Arizona and New Mexico, are vital to 
long-term resilience and survival of the species."  
The goal of the CBD's suit is to get the judiciary to require that the USFWS 
follow the letter of the law.  
"A judge is not empowered to make them designate critical habitat," Robinson 
said. "But he can ask them to strike down their 2006 ruling, in which they 
outlined why they were not going to establish critical habitat. They have no 
choice in the matter. They can't just say they don't want to do it. The law 
requires that they do it."  
If this case gets fast-tracked, a ruling could be forthcoming in six to10 
months, Robinson said. If it is not fast-tracked, it could take two years.  
And, if CBD wins?  
"Then USFWS would likely find itself establishing critical habitat," Robinson 
said.  
The establishment of that habitat in and of itself might or might not help 
the jaguar recover. But the handful of animals known to call the U.S. home at 
this time certainly do not have a sufficient genetic pool to recover the species 
without outside genes entering the mix. Those genes, according to Robinson, 
could conceivably make their way onto American soil via natural migration — 
especially if critical habitat is established.  
Robinson is wary of fielding the inevitable next questions: What happens if 
there is insufficient natural gene-pooling? Could we see an reintroduction 
program for felines that can weigh up to 300 pounds, cats that can grow up to 
twice the size of mountain lions? Could we have jaguars being brought up to 
southwest New Mexico and Gila Country from Central America the same way wolves are 
now being brought down from Canada?  
"I do not know where this will lead," Robinson said. "Let's wait and see how 
the suit goes."  
M. John Fayhee can be reached at _jfayhee at scsun-news.com_ 
(mailto:jfayhee at scsun-news.com)  
_http://www.scsun-news.com/news/ci_6789129_ 
(http://www.scsun-news.com/news/ci_6789129) 



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